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A ${\bf 1.4}$ deg${\bf ^2}$ blind survey for CII], CIII] and CIV at ${\bf z\sim0.7-1.5}$. II: luminosity functions and cosmic average line ratios

arXiv:1704.01124 · doi:10.1093/mnras/stx1713

Abstract

Recently, the CIII] and CIV emission lines have been observed in galaxies in the early Universe ($z>5$), providing new ways to measure their redshift and study their stellar populations and AGN. We explore the first blind CII], CIII] and CIV survey ($z\sim0.68, 1.05, 1.53$, respectively) presented in Stroe et al. (2017). We derive luminosity functions (LF) and study properties of CII], CIII] and CIV line emitters through comparisons to the LFs of H$α$ and Ly$α$ emitters, UV selected star forming (SF) galaxies and quasars at similar redshifts. The CII] LF at $z\sim0.68$ is equally well described by a Schechter or a power-law LF, characteristic of a mixture of SF and AGN activity. The CIII] LF ($z\sim1.05$) is consistent to a scaled down version of the Schechter H$α$ and Ly$α$ LF at their redshift, indicating a SF origin. In stark contrast, the CIV LF at $z\sim1.53$ is well fit by a power-law, quasar-like LF. We find that the brightest UV sources ($M_{UV}<-22$) will universally have CIII] and CIV emission. However, on average, CIII] and CIV are not as abundant as H$α$ or Ly$α$ emitters at the same redshift, with cosmic average ratios of $\sim0.02-0.06$ to H$α$ and $\sim0.01-0.1$ to intrinsic Ly$α$. We predict that the CIII] and CIV lines can only be truly competitive in confirming high redshift candidates when the hosts are intrinsically bright and the effective Ly$α$ escape fraction is below 1 per cent. While CIII] and CIV were proposed as good tracers of young, relatively low-metallicity galaxies typical of the early Universe, we find that, at least at $z\sim1.5$, CIV is exclusively hosted by AGN/quasars, especially at large line equivalent widths.

Accepted for publication to MNRAS. Comments welcome! 11 pages, 7 figures, 5 tables. Paper I can be found here: https://arxiv.org/abs/1703.10169