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    An atlas of MUSE observations towards twelve massive lensing clusters
    (Les Ulis : EDP Sciences, 2021) Richard, Johan; Claeyssens, Adélaïde; Lagattuta, David; Guaita, Lucia; Bauer, Franz Erik; Pello, Roser; Carton, David; Bacon, Roland; Soucail, Geneviève; Lyon, Gonzalo Prieto; Kneib, Jean-Paul; Mahler, Guillaume; Clément, Benjamin; Mercier, Wilfried; Variu, Andrei; Tamone, Amélie; Ebeling, Harald; Schmidt, Kasper B.; Nanayakkara, Themiya; Maseda, Michael; Weilbacher, Peter M.; Bouché, Nicolas; Bouwens, Rychard J.; Wisotzki, Lutz; de la Vieuville, Geoffroy; Martinez, Johany; Patrício, Vera
    Context. Spectroscopic surveys of massive galaxy clusters reveal the properties of faint background galaxies thanks to the magnification provided by strong gravitational lensing. Aims. We present a systematic analysis of integral-field-spectroscopy observations of 12 massive clusters, conducted with the Multi Unit Spectroscopic Explorer (MUSE). All data were taken under very good seeing conditions (~0".6) in effective exposure times between two and 15 h per pointing, for a total of 125 h. Our observations cover a total solid angle of ~23 arcmin2 in the direction of clusters, many of which were previously studied by the MAssive Clusters Survey, Frontier Fields (FFs), Grism Lens-Amplified Survey from Space and Cluster Lensing And Supernova survey with Hubble programmes. The achieved emission line detection limit at 5? for a point source varies between (0.77-1.5) × 10-18 erg s-1 cm-2 at 7000 Å. Methods. We present our developed strategy to reduce these observational data, detect continuum sources and line emitters in the datacubes, and determine their redshifts. We constructed robust mass models for each cluster to further confirm our redshift measurements using strong-lensing constraints, and identified a total of 312 strongly lensed sources producing 939 multiple images. Results. The final redshift catalogues contain more than 3300 robust redshifts, of which 40% are for cluster members and ∼30% are for lensed Lyman-α emitters. Fourteen percent of all sources are line emitters that are not seen in the available HST images, even at the depth of the FFs (∼29 AB). We find that the magnification distribution of the lensed sources in the high-magnification regime (μ = 2–25) follows the theoretical expectation of N(z) ∝ μ−2. The quality of this dataset, number of lensed sources, and number of strong-lensing constraints enables detailed studies of the physical properties of both the lensing cluster and the background galaxies. The full data products from this work, including the datacubes, catalogues, extracted spectra, ancillary images, and mass models, are made available to the community.
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    The MUSE Hubble Ultra Deep Field Survey : XII. Mg II emission and absorption in star-forming galaxies
    (Les Ulis : EDP Sciences, 2018) Feltre, Anna; Bacon, Roland; Tresse, Laurence; Finley, Hayley; Carton, David; Blaizot, Jérémy; Bouché, Nicolas; Garel, Thibault; Inami, Hanae; Boogaard, Leindert A.; Brinchmann, Jarle; Charlot, Stéphane; Chevallard, Jacopo; Contini, Thierry; Michel-Dansac, Leo; Mahler, Guillaume; Marino, Raffaella A.; Maseda, Michael V.; Richard, Johan; Schmidt, Kasper B.; Verhamme, Anne
    The physical origin of the near-ultraviolet Mg II emission remains an underexplored domain, unlike more typical emission lines that are detected in the spectra of star-forming galaxies. We explore the nebular and physical properties of a sample of 381 galaxies between 0.70 < z < 2.34 drawn from the MUSE Hubble Ultra Deep Survey. The spectra of these galaxies show a wide variety of profiles of the Mg II λλ2796, 2803 resonant doublet, from absorption to emission. We present a study on the main drivers for the detection of Mg II emission in galaxy spectra. By exploiting photoionization models, we verified that the emission-line ratios observed in galaxies with Mg II in emission are consistent with nebular emission from HII regions. From a simultaneous analysis of MUSE spectra and ancillary Hubble Space Telescope information through spectral energy distribution fitting, we find that galaxies with Mg II in emission have lower stellar masses, smaller sizes, bluer spectral slopes, and lower optical depth than those with absorption. This leads us to suggest that Mg II emission is a potential tracer of physical conditions that are not merely related to those of the ionized gas. We show that these differences in Mg II emission and absorption can be explained in terms of a higher dust and neutral gas content in the interstellar medium (ISM) of galaxies showing Mg II in absorption, which confirms the extreme sensitivity of Mg II to the presence of the neutral ISM. We conclude with an analogy between the Mg II doublet and the Ly α line that lies in their resonant nature. Further investigations with current and future facilities, including the James Webb Space Telescope, are promising because the detection of Mg II emission and its potential connection with Lyα could provide new insights into the ISM content in the early Universe.