z~7 galaxy candidates from NICMOS observations over the HDF South and the CDF-S and HDF-N GOODS fields
Rychard J. Bouwens (UCSC/Leiden), Garth D. Illingworth (UCSC),, Valentino Gonzalez (UCSC), Ivo Labbe (OCIW), Marijn Franx (Leiden),, Christopher J. Conselice (Nottingham), John Blakeslee (HIA), Pieter van, Dokkum (Yale), Brad Holden (UCSC), Dan Magee (UCSC), Danilo Marchesini

TL;DR
This study searches for bright z>~7 galaxy candidates using NICMOS data over GOODS fields and HDF South, identifying 15 candidates, constraining galaxy evolution at high redshift, and setting upper limits on z~9 galaxy prevalence.
Contribution
First comprehensive search for bright z>~7 galaxies over multiple fields using NICMOS, providing new constraints on galaxy evolution and the UV luminosity function at high redshift.
Findings
15 z-dropout candidates identified, 7 new.
Volume density of luminous galaxies at z~7 is 13 times lower than at z~4.
Upper limits set on the prevalence of z~9 galaxies.
Abstract
We use ~88 arcmin**2 of deep (>~26.5 mag at 5 sigma) NICMOS data over the two GOODS fields and the HDF South to conduct a search for bright z>~7 galaxy candidates. This search takes advantage of an efficient preselection over 58 arcmin**2 of NICMOS H-band data where only plausible z>~7 candidates are followed up with NICMOS J-band observations. ~248 arcmin**2 of deep ground-based near-infrared data (>~25.5 mag, 5 sigma) is also considered in the search. In total, we report 15 z-dropout candidates over this area -- 7 of which are new to these search fields. Two possible z~9 J-dropout candidates are also found, but seem unlikely to correspond to z~9 galaxies. The present z~9 search is used to set upper limits on the prevalence of such sources. Rigorous testing is undertaken to establish the level of contamination of our selections by photometric scatter, low mass stars, supernovae (SNe),…
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