4.7 Article

BRIGHT STRONGLY LENSED GALAXIES AT REDSHIFT z similar to 6-7 BEHIND THE CLUSTERS ABELL 1703 AND CL0024+16

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 697, Issue 2, Pages 1907-1917

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0004-637X/697/2/1907

Keywords

cosmology: observations; galaxies: clusters: general; galaxies: high-redshift; gravitational lensing

Funding

  1. NASA [NAS 5-32865, NAG57697]
  2. HST [AR10310, 3GO10874]
  3. Spitzer [GO20749]
  4. FONDECYT [1071008]

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We report on the discovery of three bright, strongly lensed objects behind Abell 1703 and CL0024+16 from a dropout search over 25 arcmin(2) of deep NICMOS data, with deep ACS optical coverage. They are undetected in the deep ACS images below 8500 angstrom and have clear detections in the J and H bands. Fits to the ACS, NICMOS, and IRAC data yield robust photometric redshifts in the range z similar to 6-7 and largely rule out the possibility that they are low-redshift interlopers. All three objects are extended, and resolved into a pair of bright knots. The bright i-band dropout in Abell 1703 has an H-band AB magnitude of 23.9, which makes it one of the brightest known galaxy candidates at z > 5.5. Our model fits suggest a young, massive galaxy only similar to 60 million years old with a mass of similar to 10(10) M-circle dot. The dropout galaxy candidates behind CL0024+16 are separated by 2 ''.5 (similar to 2 kpc in the source plane), and have H-band AB magnitudes of 25.0 and 25.6. Lensing models of CL0024+16 suggest that the objects have comparable intrinsic magnitudes of AB similar to 27.3, approximately one magnitude fainter than L* at z similar to 6.5. Their similar redshifts, spectral energy distribution, and luminosities, coupled with their very close proximity on the sky, suggest that they are spatially associated, and plausibly are physically bound. Combining this sample with two previously reported, similarly magnified galaxy candidates at z similar to 6-8, we find that complex systems with dual nuclei may be a common feature of high-redshift galaxies.

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