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26 April 2024 |
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Article overview
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Lyman alpha Emitting Galaxies in the Nearby Universe | Matthew Hayes
; | Date: |
27 May 2015 | Abstract: | The Lya emission line of HI is intrinsically the brightest feature in the
spectrum of astrophysical nebulae, making it a very attractive observational
tool with which to survey galaxies. Moreover as a UV resonance line, Lya
possesses several unique characteristics that make it useful to study the ISM
and ionizing stellar population at all cosmic epochs. In this review I present
a summary of Lya observations of galaxies in the nearby universe. At UV
magnitudes reachable with current facilities, only ~5% of the local galaxy
population shows a Lya equivalent width (EW_Lya) that exceeds 20AA. This
fraction increases dramatically at higher z, but only in the local universe can
we study galaxies in detail and assemble unprecedented multi-wavelength
datasets. I discuss many local Lya observations, showing that when galaxies
show net Lya emission, they ubiquitously produce large halos of scattered Lya,
that dominate the integrated luminosity. We discuss how global EW_Lya and the
Lya escape fraction (fescLya) are higher (EW_Lya >~ 20AA and fescLya> 10%) in
galaxies that represent the less massive and younger end of the distributions
for local objects. This is connected with various properties, such that
Lya-emitters have lower metallicities (median value of 12+log(O/H) ~ 8.1) and
dust reddening. However, the presence of galactic outflows is also vital to
Doppler shift the Lya line out of resonance with the HI, as high EW_Lya is
found only among galaxies with winds faster than ~50km/s. The evidence is then
assembled into a coherent picture, and the requirement for star formation
driven feedback is discussed in the context of an evolutionary sequence where
the ISM is accelerated and/or subject to fluid instabilities, which reduce the
scattering of Lya. Concluding remarks take the form of perspectives upon the
most pressing questions that can be answered by observation. | Source: | arXiv, 1505.7483 | Services: | Forum | Review | PDF | Favorites |
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