Star Formation at z~6: i-dropouts in the ACS GTO fields
R.J. Bouwens, G.D. Illingworth, P. Rosati, C. Lidman, T. Broadhurst,, M. Franx, H.C. Ford, D. Magee, N. Benitez, J.P. Blakeslee, G.R. Meurer, M., Clampin, G.F. Hartig, D.R. Ardila, F. Bartko, R.A. Brown, C.J. Burrows, E.S., Cheng, N.J.G. Cross, P.D. Feldman, D.A. Golimowski

TL;DR
This study identifies and analyzes z~6 galaxies using i-dropout criteria in deep ACS GTO fields, estimating their luminosity density and star formation rate, and comparing results with lower-redshift data to understand early universe galaxy formation.
Contribution
First comprehensive analysis of z~6 galaxy luminosity density using multiple methods and deep imaging, providing new insights into star formation at this epoch.
Findings
Detected 23 i-dropouts over 46 arcmin^2.
Estimated a 39% decline in UV luminosity density from z~3 to z~6.
Derived a star formation rate of approximately 0.009 M_sun/yr/Mpc^3 at z~6.
Abstract
Using an i-z dropout criterion, we determine the space density of z~6 galaxies from two deep ACS GTO fields with deep optical-IR imaging. A total of 23 objects are found over 46 arcmin^2, or ~0.5 objects/arcmin^2 down to z~27.3 (6 sigma; all AB mag) (including one probable z~6 AGN). Combining deep ISAAC data for our RDCS1252-2927 field (J~25.7 and Ks~25.0 (5 sigma)) and NICMOS data for the HDF North (JH~27.3 (5 sigma)), we verify that these dropouts have flat spectral slopes. i-dropouts in our sample range in luminosity from ~1.5 L* (z~25.6) to ~0.3 L* (z~27.3) with the exception of one very bright candidate at z~24.2. The half-light radii vary from 0.09" to 0.29", or 0.5 kpc to 1.7 kpc. We derive the z~6 rest-frame UV luminosity density using three different procedures, each utilizing simulations based on a CDF South V dropout sample. First, we compare our findings with a no-evolution…
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.
Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
