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The SINS/zC-SINF survey of z~2 galaxy kinematics: SINFONI adaptive optics-assisted data and kiloparsec-scale emission line properties

Authors :
Schreiber, N. M. Förster
Renzini, A.
Mancini, C.
Genzel, R.
Bouché, N.
Cresci, G.
Hicks, E. K. S.
Lilly, S. J.
Peng, Y.
Burkert, A.
Carollo, C. M.
Cimatti, A.
Daddi, E.
Davies, R. I.
Genel, S.
Kurk, J. D.
Lang, P.
Lutz, D.
Mainieri, V.
McCracken, H. J.
Mignoli, M.
Naab, T.
Oesch, P.
Pozzetti, L.
Scodeggio, M.
Griffin, K. Shapiro
Shapley, A. E.
Sternberg, A.
Tacchella, S.
Tacconi, L. J.
Wuyts, S.
Zamorani, G.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

We present the "SINS/zC-SINF AO survey" of 35 star-forming galaxies, the largest sample with deep adaptive optics-assisted (AO) near-infrared integral field spectroscopy at z~2. The observations, taken with SINFONI at the Very Large Telescope, resolve the Ha and [NII] line emission and kinematics on scales of ~1.5 kpc. In stellar mass, star formation rate, rest-optical colors and size, the AO sample is representative of its parent seeing-limited sample and probes the massive (M* ~ 2x10^9 - 3x10^11 Msun), actively star-forming (SFR ~ 10-600 Msun/yr) part of the z~2 galaxy population over a wide range in colors ((U-V)_rest ~ 0.15-1.5 mag) and half-light radii (R_e,H ~ 1-8.5 kpc). The sample overlaps largely with the "main sequence" of star-forming galaxies in the same redshift range to a similar K_AB = 23 magnitude limit; it has ~0.3 dex higher median specific SFR, ~0.1 mag bluer median (U-V)_rest color, and ~10% larger median rest-optical size. We describe the observations, data reduction, and extraction of basic flux and kinematic properties. With typically 3-4 times higher resolution and 4-5 times longer integrations (up to 23hr) than the seeing-limited datasets of the same objects, the AO data reveal much more detail in morphology and kinematics. The now complete AO observations confirm the majority of kinematically-classified disks and the typically elevated disk velocity dispersions previously reported based on subsets of the data. We derive typically flat or slightly negative radial [NII]/Ha gradients, with no significant trend with global galaxy properties, kinematic nature, or the presence of an AGN. Azimuthal variations in [NII]/Ha are seen in several sources and are associated with ionized gas outflows, and possible more metal-poor star-forming clumps or small companions. [Abridged]<br />Comment: Submitted to the Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series. 64 pages, 36 figures. The reduced data sets will be made available once the paper is accepted for publication. A version with full resolution Figures is available at http://www.mpe.mpg.de/~forster/FS18_AOsurvey_ApJSsubm.html

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1802.07276
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4365/aadd49