HST Imaging of an Old Galaxy Group at Z = 1.55
Chapter in The Evolution of Galaxies, Springer Nature (2002) 527-528
HST imaging of an old galaxy group at Z=1.55
ASTROPHYSICS AND SPACE SCIENCE 281:1-2 (2002) 527-528
Near-IR Integral Field Spectroscopy of High-z Galaxies
Chapter in The Evolution of Galaxies, Springer Nature (2002) 529-530
Serendipitously detected galaxies in the Hubble Deep Field
Astronomical Journal 122:2 (2001) 598-610
Abstract:
We present a catalog of 74 galaxies detected serendipitously during a campaign of spectroscopic observations of the Hubble Deep Field North (HDF) and its environs. Among the identified objects are five candidate Lyα emitters at z ≳ 5, a galaxy cluster at z = 0.85, and a Chandra source with a heretofore undetermined redshift of z = 2.011. We report redshifts for 25 galaxies in the central HDF, 13 of which had no prior published spectroscopic redshift. Of the remaining 49 galaxies, 30 are located in the single-orbit HDF flanking fields. We discuss the redshift distribution of the serendipitous sample, which contains galaxies in the range 0.10 < z < 5.77 with a median redshift of z = 0.85, and we present strong evidence for redshift clustering. By comparing our spectroscopic redshifts with optical/IR photometric studies of the HDF, we find that photometric redshifts are in most cases capable of producing reasonable predictions of galaxy redshifts. Finally, we estimate the line-of-sight velocity dispersion and the corresponding mass and expected X-ray luminosity of the galaxy cluster, we present strong arguments for interpreting the Chandra source as an obscured active galactic nucleus, and we discuss in detail the spectrum of one of the candidate z ≳ 5 Lyα emitters.A sample of 6C radio sources designed to find objects at redshift > 4: II --- spectrophotometry and emission line properties
ArXiv astro-ph/0106127 (2001)