A study of extreme CIII]1908 & [OIII]88/[CII]157 emission in Pox 186: implications for JWST+ALMA (FUV+FIR) studies of distant galaxies
Nimisha Kumari, Renske Smit, Claus Leitherer, Joris Witstok, Mike J, Irwin, Marco Sirianni, Alessandra Aloisi

TL;DR
This study investigates the extreme UV and FIR emission lines in the local galaxy Pox 186, an analogue of early universe galaxies, to inform future JWST and ALMA observations of distant galaxies during reionization.
Contribution
It provides detailed analysis of UV and FIR spectral features in Pox 186, revealing extreme emission line ratios and profiles, and explores implications for studying early galaxies with upcoming telescopes.
Findings
Pox 186 exhibits the strongest UV CIII] emission EW in local galaxies.
Detected double-peak structure in CIV emission lines, modeled via resonant scattering or absorption.
Extreme FIR line ratios correlate with extreme UV properties, aiding future high-redshift galaxy studies.
Abstract
Carbon spectral features are ubiquitous in the ultraviolet (UV) and far-infrared (FIR) spectra of galaxies in the epoch of reionization (EoR). We probe the ionized carbon content of a blue compact dwarf galaxy Pox 186 using the UV, optical, mid-infrared and FIR data taken with telescopes in space (Hubble, Spitzer, Herschel) and on the ground (Gemini). This local (z~0.0040705) galaxy is likely an analogue of EoR galaxies, as revealed by its extreme FIR emission line ratio, [OIII] 88/[CII] 157 (>10). The UV spectra reveal extreme CIII] 1907, 1909 emission with the strongest equivalent width (EW) = 35.85 0.73 \AA detected so far in the local (z~0) Universe, a relatively strong CIV 1548, 1550 emission with EW = 7.95 0.45\AA, but no He II 1640 detection. Several scenarios are explored to explain the high EW of carbon lines, including high effective temperature, high…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
