Near-Infrared Emission Line Searches for High-Redshift Galaxies
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In this article I review recent developments in near-infrared emission line searches for star-forming galaxies at high redshift. Using the J-, H- & K-bands we can potentially chart the history of star formation over the range 1<z<5 using the prominent rest-optical nebular emission lines alone, filling in the "redshift desert" at z~1-3 where most common emission lines lie outside the optical bands. Studying the rest-frame optical at z~2 also allows a fair comparison to be made with the local Universe - the rest-optical lines are vastly more robust to extinction by dust than the rest-UV, with the resonantly-scattered Ly-alpha line particularly unreliable. I discuss the recent history of near-infrared emission-line searches using narrow-band imaging and spectroscopy, and look to the future in this era of 10-m telescopes: such work gives us the potential to push to z>10, the next frontier in the Hy-Redshift Universe.
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