Discovery of an Excess of Halpha Emitters around 4C 23.56 at z=2.48
Ichi Tanaka (1), Carlos De Breuck (2), Jaron D. Kurk (3), Yoshiaki, Taniguchi (4), Tadayuki Kodama (1, 5), Yuichi Matsuda (6), Chris Packham, (7), Andrew Zirm (8), Masaru Kajisawa (5, 9), Takashi Ichikawa (9), Nick, Seymour (10), Daniel Stern (11), Alan Stockton (12)

TL;DR
This study identifies a significant excess of Halpha-emitting galaxies around the radio galaxy 4C 23.56 at z=2.48, revealing a dense proto-cluster environment with enhanced star formation and dust obscuration.
Contribution
It reports the discovery of a proto-cluster at z=2.48 with a detailed analysis of star formation activity and dust obscuration in Halpha emitters, comparing it to another proto-cluster at similar redshift.
Findings
Detected 11 candidate Halpha emitters with ~3-sigma significance.
Found an excess of faint MIPS sources indicating obscured star formation.
Star formation rates are high, with median >100 solar masses per year.
Abstract
We report the discovery of a significant excess of candidate Halpha emitters (HAEs) in the field of the radio galaxy 4C 23.56 at z=2.483. Using the MOIRCS near-infrared imager on the Subaru Telescope we found 11 candidate emission-line galaxies to a flux limit of ~7.5 10^-17 erg s-1 cm-2, which is about 5 times excess from the expected field counts with ~3-sigma significance. Three of these are spectroscopically confirmed as redshifted Halpha at z=2.49. The distribution of candidate emitters on the sky is tightly confined to a 1.2-Mpc-radius area at z=2.49, locating 4C 23.56 at the western edge of the distribution. Analysis of the deep Spitzer MIPS 24 mu m imaging shows that there is also an excess of faint MIPS sources. All but two of the 11 HAEs are also found in the MIPS data. The inferred star-formation rate (SFR) of the HAEs based on the extinction-corrected Halpha luminosity…
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.
