The First Systematic Survey for Lyman Alpha Emitters at z=7.3 with Red-sensitive Subaru/Suprime-Cam
Takatoshi Shibuya, Nobunari Kashikawa, Kazuaki Ota, Masanori Iye,, Masami Ouchi, Hisanori Furusawa, Kazuhiro Shimasaku, and Takashi Hattori

TL;DR
This study conducted deep imaging and spectroscopic surveys for Lyman Alpha Emitters at redshift 7.3, discovering one confirmed LAE and analyzing the decline in LAE number density, indicating rapid increase in neutral hydrogen fraction in the early universe.
Contribution
First systematic survey for LAEs at z=7.3 using Subaru/Suprime-Cam with new red-sensitive CCDs and narrow-band filter, providing new data on high-redshift galaxy populations.
Findings
Confirmed one LAE at z=7.215 with detailed luminosity and skewness measurements.
Detected a probable quasar or AGN with asymmetric emission line at z=7.288.
Found a likely supernova-related galaxy with luminosity variability.
Abstract
We have performed deep imaging surveys for LyA emitters (LAEs) at redshift ~7.3 in two blank fields, the Subaru Deep Field (SDF) and the Subaru/XMM-Newton Deep survey Field (SXDF), using the Subaru/Suprime-Cam equipped with new red-sensitive CCDs and a new narrow-band filter, NB1006 (lambda_c=10052 Ang, FWHM=214 Ang). We identified four objects as LAE candidates that exhibit luminosity excess in NB1006. By carrying out deep follow-up spectroscopy for three of them using Subaru/FOCAS and Keck/DEIMOS, a definitively asymmetric emission line is detected for one of them, SXDF-NB1006-2. Assuming this line is LyA, this object is a LAE at z=7.215 which has luminosity of 1.2^{+1.5}_{-0.6} x 10^43 [erg s-1] and a weighted skewness S_w=4.90+-0.86. Another object, SDF-NB1006-2, shows variable photometry and is thus probably a quasar (QSO) or an active galactic nucleus (AGN). It shows an asymmetric…
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