Extended Lyman Alpha Nebulae at z ~ 2.3: An Extremely Rare and Strongly Clustered Population?
Yujin Yang (1), Ann Zabludoff (1), Christy Tremonti (1,2), Daniel, Eisenstein (1), Romeel Dav\'e (1) ((1) University of Arizona, (2) MPIA)

TL;DR
This study presents a wide-field survey discovering four rare, luminous Lyman Alpha blobs at z~2.3, revealing their strong clustering, diverse AGN activity, and potential role as precursors to galaxy clusters.
Contribution
First unbiased, wide-field detection of luminous LyA blobs at z~2.3, highlighting their rarity, clustering, and association with AGN activity, suggesting they are early cluster precursors.
Findings
Four LyA blobs discovered with high luminosity and large isophotal areas.
Half of the blobs are associated with AGN activity, indicating diverse origins.
The blobs are highly clustered, similar to galaxy clusters at the same redshift.
Abstract
To obtain an unbiased sample of bright LyA blobs [L(LyA) > 10^43 ergs/s], we have undertaken a blind, wide-field, narrow-band imaging survey in the NOAO Deep Wide Field Survey Bootes field with the Steward Bok-2.3m telescope. After searching over 4.82 sq. degrees at z=2.3, we discover four LyA blobs with L(LyA) = 1.6-5.3 x 10^43 ergs/s, isophotal areas of 28-57 sq. arcsec, and broad LyA line profiles (FWHM = 900-1250 km/s). In contrast with the extended Lyman alpha halos associated with high-z radio galaxies, none of our four blobs are radio-loud. The X-ray luminosities and optical spectra of these blobs are diverse. Two blobs (3 and 4) are X-ray-detected with L_X(2-7 keV) = 2-4 x 10^44 ergs/s and have broad optical emission lines (C IV) characteristic of AGN, implying that 50% of our sample blobs are associated with strong AGN. The other 50% of blobs (1 and 2) are not X-ray or…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · History and Developments in Astronomy
