Diffuse Lyman Alpha Emitting Halos: A Generic Property of High Redshift Star Forming Galaxies
C. C. Steidel, M. Bogosavljevi\'c, A. E. Shapley, J. A. Kollmeier, N., A. Reddy, D. K. Erb, and M. Pettini

TL;DR
This study reveals that high-redshift star-forming galaxies universally possess extensive, diffuse Lyman-alpha halos that significantly increase total emission measurements, suggesting a common property linked to galaxy circum-galactic media.
Contribution
It demonstrates that all high-redshift UV-selected galaxies have diffuse Lyman-alpha halos, which impacts their classification and understanding of galaxy emission properties.
Findings
Diffuse Ly-alpha emission extends at least 80 kpc from galaxies.
Including halos increases Ly-alpha flux and equivalent width by a factor of 5.
Most Ly-alpha emission originates from galaxy H II regions and is scattered by circum-galactic H I gas.
Abstract
Using a sample of 92 UV continuum-selected, spectroscopically identified galaxies with <z> = 2.65, all of which have been imaged in the Ly-a line with extremely deep narrow-band imaging, we examine galaxy Ly-a emission profiles to very faint surface brightness limits. The galaxies are representative of spectroscopic samples of LBGs at similar redshifts in terms of apparent magnitude, UV luminosity, inferred extinction, and star formation rate, and were selected without regard to Ly-a emission properties. We use extremely deep stacks of UV continuum and Ly-a emission line images to show that all sub-samples exhibit diffuse Ly-a emission to radii of at least 10" (80 physical kpc), including galaxies whose spectra exhibit Ly-a in net absorption. The intensity scaling, but not the surface brightness distribution, is strongly correlated with the emission observed in the central ~1". The…
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