Stellar Populations of Lyman Alpha Emitters at z = 3 - 4 Based on Deep Large Area Surveys in the Subaru-SXDS/UKIDSS-UDS Field
Yoshiaki Ono, Masami Ouchi, Kazuhiro Shimasaku, Masayuki Akiyama,, James Dunlop, Duncan Farrah, Janice C. Lee, Ross McLure, Sadanori Okamura,, Makiko Yoshida

TL;DR
This study analyzes the stellar populations of Lyman alpha emitters at redshifts 3.1 and 3.7, revealing their mass, star formation rates, dust extinction, and comparison with other galaxy populations using deep multi-wavelength surveys.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of LAE stellar populations at z=3-4 based on deep optical to infrared photometry, highlighting differences between K-detected and undetected LAEs.
Findings
K-undetected LAEs are low-mass with modest SFRs and dust extinction.
K-detected LAEs are more massive and heavily obscured, resembling ULIRGs.
LAEs are the least massive among studied galaxy populations but have high specific star formation rates.
Abstract
We investigate the stellar populations of Lyman alpha emitters (LAEs) at z=3.1 and 3.7 in 0.65 deg^2 of the Subaru/XMM-Newton Deep Field, based on rest-frame UV-to-optical photometry obtained from the Subaru/XMM-Newton Deep Survey, the UKIDSS/Ultra Deep Survey, and the Spitzer legacy survey of the UKIDSS/UDS. Among a total of 302 LAEs (224 for z=3.1 and 78 for z=3.7), only 11 are detected in the K band, i.e., brighter than K(3sigma)=24.1 mag. Eight of the 11 K-detected LAEs are spectroscopically confirmed. We find that the K-undetected objects, which should closely represent the LAE population as a whole, have low stellar masses of ~ 10^8 - 10^8.5 Msun, modest SFRs of 1 - 100 Msun yr^-1, and modest dust extinction of E(B-V) < 0.2. The K-detected objects are massive, Mstar ~ 10^9 - 10^10.5 Msun, and have significant dust extinction with a median of E(B-V) ~= 0.3. Four K-detected objects…
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