Hubble Space Telescope WFC3 Early Release Science: Emission-Line Galaxies from Infrared Grism Observations
A. N. Straughn, H. Kuntschner, M. Kuemmel, J. R. Walsh, S. H. Cohen,, J.P. Gardner, R. A. Windhorst, R. W. O'Connell, N. Pirzkal, G. Meurer, P.J., McCarthy, N. P. Hathi, S. Malhotra, J. Rhoads, B. Balick, H. E. Bond, D., Calzetti, M. J. Disney, M. A. Dopita, J. A. Frogel

TL;DR
This paper presents infrared grism spectra of emission-line galaxies from the Hubble Space Telescope, extending previous optical data, and demonstrates the effectiveness of WFC3 NIR grisms in measuring galaxy properties at high redshifts.
Contribution
It provides new infrared spectra of faint emission-line galaxies, improves redshift measurements, and showcases the capabilities of WFC3 grisms for studying galaxy evolution.
Findings
Detected emission lines in galaxies up to z~3.3.
Provided new spectroscopic redshifts for 18 galaxies.
Confirmed trends of lower star formation rates in higher mass galaxies.
Abstract
We present grism spectra of emission-line galaxies (ELGs) from 0.6-1.6 microns from the Wide Field Camera 3 on the Hubble Space Telescope. These new infrared grism data augment previous optical Advanced Camera for Surveys G800L 0.6-0.95 micron grism data in GOODS-South from the PEARS program, extending the wavelength covereage well past the G800L red cutoff. The ERS grism field was observed at a depth of 2 orbits per grism, yielding spectra of hundreds of faint objects, a subset of which are presented here. ELGs are studied via the Ha, [OIII], and [OII] emission lines detected in the redshift ranges 0.2<z<1.4, 1.2<z<2.2 and 2.0<z<3.3 respectively in the G102 (0.8-1.1 microns; R~210) and G141 (1.1-1.6 microns; R~130) grisms. The higher spectral resolution afforded by the WFC3 grisms also reveals emission lines not detectable with the G800L grism (e.g., [SII] and [SIII] lines). From these…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
