Diffuse UV light associated with the Spiderweb Galaxy: evidence for in-situ star formation outside galaxies

Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astrophysics

Scientific paper

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Accepted for publication in MNRAS, 14 pages, 9 figures

Scientific paper

10.1111/j.1365-2966.2007.12626.x

We present detailed images of diffuse UV intergalactic light (IGL), situated in a 60kpc halo that surrounds the radio galaxy MRC 1138-262 at z=2. We discuss the nature of the IGL and rule out faint cluster galaxies, nebular continuum emission, synchrotron, inverse Compton emission and scattering of galactic stellar light as possible sources of the IGL. Dust scattered quasar light is an unlikely possibility that cannot be ruled out entirely. We conclude that the source of the IGL is most likely to be a young stellar population distributed in a halo encompassing the radio and satellite galaxies, undergoing star formation at a rate greater than 57 Msun/yr. Within 70kpc of the radio core, approximately 44% of the star formation that is traced by UV light occurs in this diffuse mode. The average UV colour of the IGL is bluer than the average galaxy colour, and there is a trend for the IGL to become bluer with increasing radius from the radio galaxy. Both the galaxies and the IGL show a UV colour--surface brightness relation which can be obtained by variations in either stellar population age or extinction. These observations show a different, but potentially important mode of star formation, that is diffuse in nature. Star formation, as traced by UV light, occurs in two modes in the high redshift universe: one in the usual Lyman break galaxy clump-like mode on kpc scales, and the other in a diffuse mode over a large region surrounding massive growing galaxies. Such a mode of star formation can easily be missed by high angular resolution observations that are well suited for detecting high surface brightness compact galaxies. Extrapolating from these results, it is possible that a significant amount of star formation occurs in large extended regions within the halos of the most massive galaxies forming at high redshift.

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