[{"publisher":"Oxford University Press","scopus_import":"1","language":[{"iso":"eng"}],"month":"10","date_published":"2019-10-01T00:00:00Z","article_type":"original","date_created":"2022-07-07T13:01:03Z","intvolume":"       489","status":"public","day":"01","type":"journal_article","issue":"1","publication":"Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society","page":"555-573","external_id":{"arxiv":["1811.00556"]},"title":"The clustering of typical Ly α emitters from z ∼ 2.5–6: Host halo masses depend on Ly α and UV luminosities","year":"2019","doi":"10.1093/mnras/stz2149","main_file_link":[{"url":"https://arxiv.org/abs/1811.00556","open_access":"1"}],"abstract":[{"text":"We investigate the clustering and halo properties of ∼5000 Ly α-selected emission-line galaxies (LAEs) from the Slicing COSMOS 4K (SC4K) and from archival NB497 imaging of SA22 split in 15 discrete redshift slices between z ∼ 2.5 and 6. We measure clustering lengths of r0 ∼ 3–6 h−1 Mpc and typical halo masses of ∼1011 M⊙ for our narrowband-selected LAEs with typical LLy α ∼ 1042–43 erg s−1. The intermediate-band-selected LAEs are observed to have r0 ∼ 3.5–15 h−1 Mpc with typical halo masses of ∼1011–12 M⊙ and typical LLy α ∼ 1043–43.6 erg s−1. We find a strong, redshift-independent correlation between halo mass and Ly α luminosity normalized by the characteristic Ly α luminosity, L⋆(z). The faintest LAEs (L ∼ 0.1 L⋆(z)) typically identified by deep narrowband surveys are found in 1010 M⊙ haloes and the brightest LAEs (L ∼ 7 L⋆(z)) are found in ∼5 × 1012 M⊙ haloes. A dependency on the rest-frame 1500 Å UV luminosity, MUV, is also observed where the halo masses increase from 1011 to 1013 M⊙ for MUV ∼ −19 to −23.5 mag. Halo mass is also observed to increase from 109.8 to 1012 M⊙ for dust-corrected UV star formation rates from ∼0.6 to 10 M⊙ yr−1 and continues to increase up to 1013 M⊙ in halo mass, where the majority of those sources are active galactic nuclei. All the trends we observe are found to be redshift independent. Our results reveal that LAEs are the likely progenitors of a wide range of galaxies depending on their luminosity, from dwarf-like, to Milky Way-type, to bright cluster galaxies. LAEs therefore provide unique insight into the early formation and evolution of the galaxies we observe in the local Universe.","lang":"eng"}],"author":[{"first_name":"A A","full_name":"Khostovan, A A","last_name":"Khostovan"},{"first_name":"D","last_name":"Sobral","full_name":"Sobral, D"},{"first_name":"B","full_name":"Mobasher, B","last_name":"Mobasher"},{"first_name":"Jorryt J","orcid":"0000-0003-2871-127X","full_name":"Matthee, Jorryt J","last_name":"Matthee","id":"7439a258-f3c0-11ec-9501-9df22fe06720"},{"last_name":"Cochrane","full_name":"Cochrane, R K","first_name":"R K"},{"first_name":"N","full_name":"Chartab, N","last_name":"Chartab"},{"full_name":"Jafariyazani, M","last_name":"Jafariyazani","first_name":"M"},{"last_name":"Paulino-Afonso","full_name":"Paulino-Afonso, A","first_name":"A"},{"last_name":"Santos","full_name":"Santos, S","first_name":"S"},{"full_name":"Calhau, J","last_name":"Calhau","first_name":"J"}],"keyword":["Space and Planetary Science","Astronomy and Astrophysics","galaxies: evolution","galaxies: haloes","galaxies: high-redshift","galaxies: star formation","cosmology: observations","large-scale structure of Universe"],"publication_status":"published","citation":{"short":"A.A. Khostovan, D. Sobral, B. Mobasher, J.J. Matthee, R.K. Cochrane, N. Chartab, M. Jafariyazani, A. Paulino-Afonso, S. Santos, J. Calhau, Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 489 (2019) 555–573.","ista":"Khostovan AA, Sobral D, Mobasher B, Matthee JJ, Cochrane RK, Chartab N, Jafariyazani M, Paulino-Afonso A, Santos S, Calhau J. 2019. The clustering of typical Ly α emitters from z ∼ 2.5–6: Host halo masses depend on Ly α and UV luminosities. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 489(1), 555–573.","ama":"Khostovan AA, Sobral D, Mobasher B, et al. The clustering of typical Ly α emitters from z ∼ 2.5–6: Host halo masses depend on Ly α and UV luminosities. <i>Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society</i>. 2019;489(1):555-573. doi:<a href=\"https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stz2149\">10.1093/mnras/stz2149</a>","mla":"Khostovan, A. A., et al. “The Clustering of Typical Ly α Emitters from z ∼ 2.5–6: Host Halo Masses Depend on Ly α and UV Luminosities.” <i>Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society</i>, vol. 489, no. 1, Oxford University Press, 2019, pp. 555–73, doi:<a href=\"https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stz2149\">10.1093/mnras/stz2149</a>.","chicago":"Khostovan, A A, D Sobral, B Mobasher, Jorryt J Matthee, R K Cochrane, N Chartab, M Jafariyazani, A Paulino-Afonso, S Santos, and J Calhau. “The Clustering of Typical Ly α Emitters from z ∼ 2.5–6: Host Halo Masses Depend on Ly α and UV Luminosities.” <i>Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society</i>. Oxford University Press, 2019. <a href=\"https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stz2149\">https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stz2149</a>.","apa":"Khostovan, A. A., Sobral, D., Mobasher, B., Matthee, J. J., Cochrane, R. K., Chartab, N., … Calhau, J. (2019). The clustering of typical Ly α emitters from z ∼ 2.5–6: Host halo masses depend on Ly α and UV luminosities. <i>Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society</i>. Oxford University Press. <a href=\"https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stz2149\">https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stz2149</a>","ieee":"A. A. Khostovan <i>et al.</i>, “The clustering of typical Ly α emitters from z ∼ 2.5–6: Host halo masses depend on Ly α and UV luminosities,” <i>Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society</i>, vol. 489, no. 1. Oxford University Press, pp. 555–573, 2019."},"_id":"11535","extern":"1","publication_identifier":{"eissn":["1365-2966"],"issn":["0035-8711"]},"user_id":"2DF688A6-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87","acknowledgement":"We thank the anonymous referee for their useful comments and suggestions that helped improve this study. AAK acknowledges that this work was supported by NASA Headquarters under the NASA Earth and Space Science Fellowship Program – Grant NNX16AO92H. JM acknowledges support from the ETH Zwicky fellowship. RKC acknowledges funding from STFC via a studentship. APA acknowledges support from the Fundac¸ao para a Ci ˜ encia e a Tecnologia FCT through the fellowship PD/BD/52706/2014 and the research grant UID/FIS/04434/2013. JC and SS both acknowledge their support from the Lancaster University PhD Fellowship. We have benefited greatly from the publicly available programming language PYTHON, including the NUMPY, SCIPY, MATPLOTLIB, SCIKIT-LEARN, and ASTROPY packages, as well as the TOPCAT analysis program. The SC4K samples used in this paper are all publicly available for use by the community (Sobral et al. 2018a). The catalogue is also available on the COSMOS IPAC website (https://irsa.ipac.caltech.edu/data/COSMOS/overview.html).","oa_version":"Preprint","quality_controlled":"1","arxiv":1,"oa":1,"date_updated":"2022-08-19T06:38:42Z","volume":489,"article_processing_charge":"No"},{"date_created":"2022-07-08T11:48:48Z","date_published":"2018-08-01T00:00:00Z","article_type":"original","month":"08","language":[{"iso":"eng"}],"publisher":"Oxford University Press","scopus_import":"1","page":"2999-3015","issue":"3","publication":"Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society","type":"journal_article","day":"01","status":"public","intvolume":"       478","main_file_link":[{"url":"https://arxiv.org/abs/1705.01101"}],"year":"2018","doi":"10.1093/mnras/sty925","external_id":{"arxiv":["1705.01101"]},"title":"The clustering of H β + [O III] and [O II] emitters since z ∼ 5: Dependencies with line luminosity and stellar mass","volume":478,"date_updated":"2022-08-19T06:53:39Z","article_processing_charge":"No","arxiv":1,"acknowledgement":"We thank the anonymous referee for their useful comments and suggestions that improved this study. AAK thanks Anahita Alavi and Irene Shivaei for useful discussion in the making of this paper. AAK acknowledges that this work was supported by NASA Headquarters under the NASA Earth and Space Science Fellowship Program – Grant NNX16AO92H. DS acknowledges financial support from the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO) through a Veni fellowship and from Lancaster University through an Early Career Internal Grant A100679. PNB is grateful for support from STFC via grant STM001229/1. IRS acknowledges support from STFC (ST/L00075X/1), the ERC Advanced Grant DUSTYGAL (321334), and a Royal Society/Wolfson Merit award. JM acknowledges the support of a Huygens PhD fellowship from Leiden University. BD acknowledges financial support from NASA through the Astrophysics Data Analysis Program (ADAP), grant number NNX12AE20G.","user_id":"2DF688A6-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87","quality_controlled":"1","oa_version":"Published Version","_id":"11549","publication_identifier":{"issn":["0035-8711"],"eissn":["1365-2966"]},"extern":"1","publication_status":"published","citation":{"ista":"Khostovan AA, Sobral D, Mobasher B, Best PN, Smail I, Matthee JJ, Darvish B, Nayyeri H, Hemmati S, Stott JP. 2018. The clustering of H β + [O III] and [O II] emitters since z ∼ 5: Dependencies with line luminosity and stellar mass. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 478(3), 2999–3015.","short":"A.A. Khostovan, D. Sobral, B. Mobasher, P.N. Best, I. Smail, J.J. Matthee, B. Darvish, H. Nayyeri, S. Hemmati, J.P. Stott, Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 478 (2018) 2999–3015.","mla":"Khostovan, A. A., et al. “The Clustering of H β + [O III] and [O II] Emitters since z ∼ 5: Dependencies with Line Luminosity and Stellar Mass.” <i>Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society</i>, vol. 478, no. 3, Oxford University Press, 2018, pp. 2999–3015, doi:<a href=\"https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/sty925\">10.1093/mnras/sty925</a>.","ama":"Khostovan AA, Sobral D, Mobasher B, et al. The clustering of H β + [O III] and [O II] emitters since z ∼ 5: Dependencies with line luminosity and stellar mass. <i>Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society</i>. 2018;478(3):2999-3015. doi:<a href=\"https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/sty925\">10.1093/mnras/sty925</a>","chicago":"Khostovan, A A, D Sobral, B Mobasher, P N Best, I Smail, Jorryt J Matthee, B Darvish, H Nayyeri, S Hemmati, and J P Stott. “The Clustering of H β + [O III] and [O II] Emitters since z ∼ 5: Dependencies with Line Luminosity and Stellar Mass.” <i>Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society</i>. Oxford University Press, 2018. <a href=\"https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/sty925\">https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/sty925</a>.","apa":"Khostovan, A. A., Sobral, D., Mobasher, B., Best, P. N., Smail, I., Matthee, J. J., … Stott, J. P. (2018). The clustering of H β + [O III] and [O II] emitters since z ∼ 5: Dependencies with line luminosity and stellar mass. <i>Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society</i>. Oxford University Press. <a href=\"https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/sty925\">https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/sty925</a>","ieee":"A. A. Khostovan <i>et al.</i>, “The clustering of H β + [O III] and [O II] emitters since z ∼ 5: Dependencies with line luminosity and stellar mass,” <i>Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society</i>, vol. 478, no. 3. Oxford University Press, pp. 2999–3015, 2018."},"author":[{"first_name":"A A","full_name":"Khostovan, A A","last_name":"Khostovan"},{"first_name":"D","full_name":"Sobral, D","last_name":"Sobral"},{"first_name":"B","full_name":"Mobasher, B","last_name":"Mobasher"},{"first_name":"P N","last_name":"Best","full_name":"Best, P N"},{"first_name":"I","last_name":"Smail","full_name":"Smail, I"},{"first_name":"Jorryt J","orcid":"0000-0003-2871-127X","full_name":"Matthee, Jorryt J","last_name":"Matthee","id":"7439a258-f3c0-11ec-9501-9df22fe06720"},{"first_name":"B","full_name":"Darvish, B","last_name":"Darvish"},{"full_name":"Nayyeri, H","last_name":"Nayyeri","first_name":"H"},{"full_name":"Hemmati, S","last_name":"Hemmati","first_name":"S"},{"first_name":"J P","last_name":"Stott","full_name":"Stott, J P"}],"keyword":["Space and Planetary Science","Astronomy and Astrophysics","galaxies: evolution","galaxies: haloes","galaxies: high-redshift","galaxies: star formation","cosmology: observations","large-scale structure of Universe"],"abstract":[{"text":"We investigate the clustering properties of ∼7000 H β + [O III] and [O II] narrowband-selected emitters at z ∼ 0.8–4.7 from the High-z Emission Line Survey. We find clustering lengths, r0, of 1.5–4.0 h−1 Mpc and minimum dark matter halo masses of 1010.7–12.1 M⊙ for our z = 0.8–3.2 H β + [O III] emitters and r0 ∼ 2.0–8.3 h−1 Mpc and halo masses of 1011.5–12.6 M⊙ for our z = 1.5–4.7 [O II] emitters. We find r0 to strongly increase both with increasing line luminosity and redshift. By taking into account the evolution of the characteristic line luminosity, L⋆(z), and using our model predictions of halo mass given r0, we find a strong, redshift-independent increasing trend between L/L⋆(z) and minimum halo mass. The faintest H β + [O III] emitters are found to reside in 109.5 M⊙ haloes and the brightest emitters in 1013.0 M⊙ haloes. For [O II] emitters, the faintest emitters are found in 1010.5 M⊙ haloes and the brightest emitters in 1012.6 M⊙ haloes. A redshift-independent stellar mass dependency is also observed where the halo mass increases from 1011 to 1012.5 M⊙ for stellar masses of 108.5 to 1011.5 M⊙, respectively. We investigate the interdependencies of these trends by repeating our analysis in a Lline−Mstar grid space for our most populated samples (H β + [O III] z = 0.84 and [O II] z = 1.47) and find that the line luminosity dependency is stronger than the stellar mass dependency on halo mass. For L > L⋆ emitters at all epochs, we find a relatively flat trend with halo masses of 1012.5–13 M⊙, which may be due to quenching mechanisms in massive haloes that is consistent with a transitional halo mass predicted by models.","lang":"eng"}]},{"publication":"Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society","issue":"3","page":"2303-2323","day":"11","type":"journal_article","intvolume":"       451","status":"public","date_created":"2022-07-14T09:02:22Z","month":"08","article_type":"original","date_published":"2015-08-11T00:00:00Z","scopus_import":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","language":[{"iso":"eng"}],"arxiv":1,"article_processing_charge":"No","oa":1,"volume":451,"date_updated":"2022-08-19T08:23:18Z","publication_identifier":{"issn":["0035-8711"],"eissn":["1365-2966"]},"extern":"1","_id":"11580","oa_version":"Preprint","quality_controlled":"1","user_id":"2DF688A6-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87","acknowledgement":"The authors wish to thank the anonymous reviewer for many helpful comments and suggestions which greatly improved the clarity and quality of this work. DS acknowledges financial support from the Netherlands Organization for Scientific research (NWO) through a Veni fellowship, from FCT through an FCT Investigator Starting Grant and Start-up Grant (IF/01154/2012/CP0189/CT0010), from FCT grant PEst-OE/FIS/UI2751/2014, and from LSF and LKBF. JM acknowledges the award of a Huygens PhD fellowship. PNB is grateful for support from STFC. IRS acknowledges support from STFC, a Leverhulme Fellowship, the ERC Advanced Investigator programme DUSTYGAL and a Royal Society/Wolfson Merit Award. BMJ acknowledges support from the ERC-StG grant EGGS-278202. The Dark Cosmology Centre is funded by the DNRF. The Dark Cosmology Centre is funded by the DNRF. JWK acknowledges support from the National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) grant, no. 2008-0060544, funded by the Korea government (MSIP). JPS acknowledges support from STFC (ST/I001573/1). JC acknowledges support from the FCT-IF grant IF/01154/2012/CP0189/CT0010. The work was only possible due to OPTICON/FP7 and the invaluable access that it granted to the CFHT telescope. We would also like to acknowledge the excellent work done by CFHT staff in conducting the observations in service mode, and on delivering truly excellent data. We are also tremendously thankful to Kentaro Aoki for the incredible support while observing at Subaru with FMOS, and also to the Keck staff for the help with the observations with MOSFIRE. This work is based on observations obtained with WIRCam on the CFHT, OPTICON programme 2011B/029, 2012A019 and 2012B/016. Based on observations made with ESO telescopes at the La Silla Paranal Observatory under programmes IDs 60.A-9460 (data can be accessed through the ESO data archive), 087.A 0337 and 089.A-0965. Based on observations done with FMOS on Subaru under programme S14A-084, and on MOSFIRE/Keck observations under programme U066M. Part of the data on which this analysis is based are available from Sobral et al. (2013a). Dedicated to the memory of C. M. Sobral (1953-2014).","citation":{"ieee":"D. Sobral <i>et al.</i>, “CF-HiZELS, an ∼10 deg2 emission-line survey with spectroscopic follow-up: Hα, [O III] + Hβ and [O II] luminosity functions at z = 0.8, 1.4 and 2.2 ,” <i>Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society</i>, vol. 451, no. 3. Oxford University Press, pp. 2303–2323, 2015.","apa":"Sobral, D., Matthee, J. J., Best, P. N., Smail, I., Khostovan, A. A., Milvang-Jensen, B., … Mobasher, B. (2015). CF-HiZELS, an ∼10 deg2 emission-line survey with spectroscopic follow-up: Hα, [O III] + Hβ and [O II] luminosity functions at z = 0.8, 1.4 and 2.2 . <i>Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society</i>. Oxford University Press. <a href=\"https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stv1076\">https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stv1076</a>","chicago":"Sobral, D., Jorryt J Matthee, P. N. Best, I. Smail, A. A. Khostovan, B. Milvang-Jensen, J.-W. Kim, et al. “CF-HiZELS, an ∼10 Deg2 Emission-Line Survey with Spectroscopic Follow-up: Hα, [O III] + Hβ and [O II] Luminosity Functions at z = 0.8, 1.4 and 2.2 .” <i>Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society</i>. Oxford University Press, 2015. <a href=\"https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stv1076\">https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stv1076</a>.","mla":"Sobral, D., et al. “CF-HiZELS, an ∼10 Deg2 Emission-Line Survey with Spectroscopic Follow-up: Hα, [O III] + Hβ and [O II] Luminosity Functions at z = 0.8, 1.4 and 2.2 .” <i>Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society</i>, vol. 451, no. 3, Oxford University Press, 2015, pp. 2303–23, doi:<a href=\"https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stv1076\">10.1093/mnras/stv1076</a>.","ama":"Sobral D, Matthee JJ, Best PN, et al. CF-HiZELS, an ∼10 deg2 emission-line survey with spectroscopic follow-up: Hα, [O III] + Hβ and [O II] luminosity functions at z = 0.8, 1.4 and 2.2 . <i>Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society</i>. 2015;451(3):2303-2323. doi:<a href=\"https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stv1076\">10.1093/mnras/stv1076</a>","short":"D. Sobral, J.J. Matthee, P.N. Best, I. Smail, A.A. Khostovan, B. Milvang-Jensen, J.-W. Kim, J. Stott, J. Calhau, H. Nayyeri, B. Mobasher, Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 451 (2015) 2303–2323.","ista":"Sobral D, Matthee JJ, Best PN, Smail I, Khostovan AA, Milvang-Jensen B, Kim J-W, Stott J, Calhau J, Nayyeri H, Mobasher B. 2015. CF-HiZELS, an ∼10 deg2 emission-line survey with spectroscopic follow-up: Hα, [O III] + Hβ and [O II] luminosity functions at z = 0.8, 1.4 and 2.2 . Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 451(3), 2303–2323."},"publication_status":"published","abstract":[{"text":"We present results from the largest contiguous narrow-band survey in the near-infrared. We have used the wide-field infrared camera/Canada–France–Hawaii Telescope and the lowOH2 filter (1.187 ± 0.005 μm) to survey ≈10 deg2 of contiguous extragalactic sky in the SA22 field. A total of ∼6000 candidate emission-line galaxies are found. We use deep ugrizJK data to obtain robust photometric redshifts. We combine our data with the High-redshift(Z) Emission Line Survey (HiZELS), explore spectroscopic surveys (VVDS, VIPERS) and obtain our own spectroscopic follow-up with KMOS, FMOS and MOSFIRE to derive large samples of high-redshift emission-line selected galaxies: 3471 Hα emitters at z = 0.8, 1343 [O III] + Hβ emitters at z = 1.4 and 572 [O II] emitters at z = 2.2. We probe comoving volumes of >106 Mpc3 and find significant overdensities, including an 8.5σ (spectroscopically confirmed) overdensity of Hα emitters at z = 0.81. We derive Hα, [O III] + Hβ and [O II] luminosity functions at z = 0.8, 1.4, 2.2, respectively, and present implications for future surveys such as Euclid. Our uniquely large volumes/areas allow us to subdivide the samples in thousands of randomized combinations of areas and provide a robust empirical measurement of sample/cosmic variance. We show that surveys for star-forming/emission-line galaxies at a depth similar to ours can only overcome cosmic-variance (errors <10 per cent) if they are based on volumes >5 × 105 Mpc3; errors on L* and ϕ* due to sample (cosmic) variance on surveys probing ∼104 and ∼105 Mpc3 are typically very high: ∼300 and ∼40–60 per cent, respectively.","lang":"eng"}],"keyword":["Space and Planetary Science","Astronomy and Astrophysics","galaxies: evolution","galaxies: formation","galaxies: luminosity function","mass function","cosmology: observations","early Universe","large-scale structure of Universe"],"author":[{"last_name":"Sobral","full_name":"Sobral, D.","first_name":"D."},{"orcid":"0000-0003-2871-127X","last_name":"Matthee","full_name":"Matthee, Jorryt J","first_name":"Jorryt J","id":"7439a258-f3c0-11ec-9501-9df22fe06720"},{"first_name":"P. N.","last_name":"Best","full_name":"Best, P. N."},{"full_name":"Smail, I.","last_name":"Smail","first_name":"I."},{"last_name":"Khostovan","full_name":"Khostovan, A. A.","first_name":"A. A."},{"last_name":"Milvang-Jensen","full_name":"Milvang-Jensen, B.","first_name":"B."},{"last_name":"Kim","full_name":"Kim, J.-W.","first_name":"J.-W."},{"last_name":"Stott","full_name":"Stott, J.","first_name":"J."},{"first_name":"J.","full_name":"Calhau, J.","last_name":"Calhau"},{"full_name":"Nayyeri, H.","last_name":"Nayyeri","first_name":"H."},{"first_name":"B.","full_name":"Mobasher, B.","last_name":"Mobasher"}],"main_file_link":[{"url":"https://arxiv.org/abs/1502.06602","open_access":"1"}],"year":"2015","doi":"10.1093/mnras/stv1076","external_id":{"arxiv":["1502.06602"]},"title":"CF-HiZELS, an ∼10 deg2 emission-line survey with spectroscopic follow-up: Hα, [O III] + Hβ and [O II] luminosity functions at z = 0.8, 1.4 and 2.2 "}]
