A Study of Interstellar Gas and Stars in the Gravitationally Lensed Galaxy `The Cosmic Eye' from Rest-Frame Ultraviolet Spectroscopy
Anna M. Quider (1), Alice E. Shapley (2), Max Pettini (1), Charles C., Steidel (3), Daniel P. Stark (1) ((1) Institute of Astronomy, University, of Cambridge, (2) Department of Physics, Astronomy, University of, California, Los Angeles, (3) California Institute of Technology)

TL;DR
This study analyzes the rest-frame UV spectrum of the gravitationally lensed galaxy 'The Cosmic Eye', revealing complex interstellar gas dynamics, outflows, and absorption features that inform our understanding of star formation and galaxy evolution at high redshift.
Contribution
It provides detailed spectroscopic analysis of 'The Cosmic Eye', uncovering unique interstellar absorption components and their implications for galaxy outflows and gas accretion processes.
Findings
Interstellar absorption lines show two components with distinct velocities.
One component indicates a galaxy-scale outflow at -70 km/s.
A redshifted component suggests possible gas infall or merging activity.
Abstract
We report the results of a study of the rest-frame UV spectrum of the Cosmic Eye, a luminous Lyman break galaxy at z=3.07331 gravitationally lensed by a factor of 25. The spectrum, recorded with the ESI spectrograph on the Keck II telescope, is rich in absorption features from the gas and massive stars in this galaxy. The interstellar absorption lines are resolved into two components of approximately equal strength and each spanning several hundred km/s in velocity. One component has a net blueshift of -70 km/s relative to the stars and H II regions and presumably arises in a galaxy-scale outflow similar to those seen in most star-forming galaxies at z = 2-3. The other is more unusual in showing a mean redshift of +350 km/s relative to the systemic redshift; possible interpretations include a merging clump, or material ejected by a previous star formation episode and now falling back…
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