| Literature DB >> 19424150 |
Yoichi Tamura1, Kotaro Kohno, Kouichiro Nakanishi, Bunyo Hatsukade, Daisuke Iono, Grant W Wilson, Min S Yun, Tadafumi Takata, Yuichi Matsuda, Tomoka Tosaki, Hajime Ezawa, Thushara A Perera, Kimberly S Scott, Jason E Austermann, David H Hughes, Itziar Aretxaga, Aeree Chung, Tai Oshima, Nobuyuki Yamaguchi, Kunihiko Tanaka, Ryohei Kawabe.
Abstract
Lyman-alpha emitters are thought to be young, low-mass galaxies with ages of approximately 10(8) yr (refs 1, 2). An overdensity of them in one region of the sky (the SSA 22 field) traces out a filamentary structure in the early Universe at a redshift of z approximately 3.1 (equivalent to 15 per cent of the age of the Universe) and is believed to mark a forming protocluster. Galaxies that are bright at (sub)millimetre wavelengths are undergoing violent episodes of star formation, and there is evidence that they are preferentially associated with high-redshift radio galaxies, so the question of whether they are also associated with the most significant large-scale structure growing at high redshift (as outlined by Lyman-alpha emitters) naturally arises. Here we report an imaging survey of 1,100-microm emission in the SSA 22 region. We find an enhancement of submillimetre galaxies near the core of the protocluster, and a large-scale correlation between the submillimetre galaxies and the low-mass Lyman-alpha emitters, suggesting synchronous formation of the two very different types of star-forming galaxy within the same structure at high redshift. These results are in general agreement with our understanding of the formation of cosmic structure.Entities:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19424150 DOI: 10.1038/nature07947
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962