The HETDEX Pilot Survey III: The Low Metallicities of High-Redshift Lyman Alpha Galaxies
Steven L. Finkelstein (Texas A&M), Gary J. Hill (McDonald, Observatory), Karl Gebhardt (UT Austin), Joshua Adams (UT Austin), Guillermo, A. Blanc (UT Austin), Casey Papovich (Texas A&M), Robin Ciardullo (Penn, State), Niv Drory (MPE), Eric Gawiser (Rutgers)

TL;DR
This study presents spectroscopic observations of high-redshift Lyman alpha galaxies, revealing their low metallicities, outflow signatures, and the importance of accounting for emission lines in stellar population modeling.
Contribution
First detection of multiple rest-frame optical emission lines in high-redshift LAEs selected by Lyman alpha emission, providing insights into their metallicities and stellar populations.
Findings
LAEs have low gas-phase metallicities (<0.17 and <0.28 Z_sun).
One galaxy shows signs of large-scale outflow.
Neglecting emission lines can significantly overestimate stellar ages and masses.
Abstract
We present Keck/NIRSPEC spectroscopic observations of three Lyman alpha emitting galaxies (LAEs) at z ~ 2.3 discovered with the HETDEX pilot survey. We detect Halpha, [OIII], and Hbeta emission from two galaxies at z = 2.29 and 2.49, designated HPS194 and HPS256, respectively, representing the first detection of multiple rest-frame optical emission lines in galaxies at high-redshift selected on the basis of their Lyman alpha emission. The redshifts of the Lyman alpha emission from these galaxies are offset redward of the systemic redshifts by Delta_v = 162 +/- 37 (photometric) +/- 42 (systematic) km/s for HPS194, and Delta_v = 36 +/- 35 +/- 18 km/s for HPS256. An interpretation for HPS194 is that a large-scale outflow may be occurring in its interstellar medium. The emission line ratios imply that neither LAE hosts an active galactic nucleus. Using the upper limits on the [NII] emission…
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