Deep Hubble Space Telescope Imaging of a Compact Radio Galaxy at Z = 2.390
Abstract
We present deep 4 hr HST/WFC images in V and I of the LBDS radio galaxy 53W002, a weak and compact narrow-line galaxy recently discovered at z = 2.390. After deconvolution, the resolution is 0.2" FWHM. Its I- band structure is quite compact with 30% +/- 10% of its flux in the central <~ 1 kpc, presumably from its AGN. This is surrounded by a clearly extended and rather symmetric envelope with effective radius ~1.1" (4-15 kpc for H_0_ = 50-100,q_0_ = 0-0.5). In V, 53W002 is somewhat elongated at the same sky PA as its Lyα cloud and its VLA radio axis. We compare 52W002's rest-frame UV profile to a properly rescaled image of a nearby early-type galaxy. The much younger starburst in 53W002 has 10-20 times higher central UV surface brightness, but otherwise an r^1/4^-like light profile consistent with that of nearby luminous early- type galaxies. The available data are consistent with 53W002 being a genuinely young galaxy that only started forming stars <~0.5 Gyr before z = 2.390, but has nonetheless (just) managed to develop a rather regular light profile at z = 2.390, and suggest that the dynamical collapse of this galaxy started at about the same time as its first major burst of star formation. For this galaxy, both ~0.5 Gyr time scales are consistent with z_form_ = 2.7-4.2 (for H_0_ = 50-100, q_0_ = 0-0.5).
- Publication:
-
The Astrophysical Journal
- Pub Date:
- November 1992
- DOI:
- 10.1086/186634
- Bibcode:
- 1992ApJ...400L...1W
- Keywords:
-
- Galactic Evolution;
- Hubble Space Telescope;
- Radio Galaxies;
- Starburst Galaxies;
- Astronomical Models;
- Brightness Distribution;
- Image Processing;
- Red Shift;
- Star Formation;
- Ultraviolet Radiation;
- Astrophysics;
- GALAXIES: EVOLUTION;
- GALAXIES: FORMATION;
- GALAXIES: PHOTOMETRY