Efficient detection of emission line galaxies in the Cl0016+1609 and MACSJ1621.4+3810 supercluster filaments using SITELLE
Louise O. V. Edwards, Florence Durret, Isabel M\'arquez, Kevin Zhang

TL;DR
This study uses SITELLE spectroscopy to identify and analyze emission line galaxies in supercluster filaments at z~0.5, revealing their distribution, star formation activity, and merger status, thus advancing filament galaxy research.
Contribution
First detailed spectroscopic survey of emission line galaxies in supercluster filaments at z~0.5, providing insights into their properties and spatial distribution.
Findings
Most emission line galaxies are located in moderate density regions, avoiding dense cores.
Galaxies are predominantly blue, disky, and show signs of merging.
Emission line galaxies follow the main filament structure, indicating filamentary star formation activity.
Abstract
We observe a system of filaments and clusters around Cl0016+1609 and MACSJ1621.4+3810 using the SITELLE Fourier transform spectrograph at the Canada France Hawaii Telescope. For Cl0016+1609 (z=0.546), the observations span an 11.8 Mpc x 4.3 Mpc region along an eastern filament which covers the main cluster core, as well as two 4.3 Mpc x 4.3 Mpc regions which each cover southern subclumps. For MACSJ1621.4+3810 (z= 0.465), 3.9 Mpc x 3.9 Mpc around the main cluster core is covered. We present the frequency and location of the emission line galaxies, their emission line images, and calculate the star formation rates, specific star formation rates and merger statistics. In Cl0016+1609, we find thirteen [OII]~3727 Angstrom emitting galaxies with star formation rates between 0.2 and 14.0 M yr. 91% are found in regions with moderate local galaxy density, avoiding…
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.
