Lyman alpha emission from the first galaxies: Implications of UV backgrounds and the formation of molecules
M. A. Latif, Dominik R. G. Schleicher, M. Spaans, and S. Zaroubi

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations to explore how UV backgrounds influence Lyman alpha emission from early galaxies, revealing conditions that enhance or suppress this emission and implications for observations with telescopes.
Contribution
It provides detailed modeling of Lyman alpha emission considering primordial chemistry and UV backgrounds, highlighting the environmental dependence of emission strength and distribution.
Findings
Lyman alpha luminosity can increase up to 100 times with UV background.
Emission is extended and originates from the halo envelope, not the core.
High hydrogen column density suppresses Lyman alpha emission in the core.
Abstract
The Lyman alpha line is a robust tracer of high redshift galaxies. We present estimates of Lyman alpha emission from a protogalactic halo illuminated by UV background radiation fields with various intensities. For this purpose, we performed cosmological hydrodynamics simulations with the adaptive mesh refinement code FLASH, including a detailed network for primordial chemistry,comprising the formation of primordial molecules, a multi-level model for the hydrogen atom as well as the photo-ionization and photo-dissociation processes in a UV background. We find that the presence of a background radiation field J_21 excites the emission of Lyman alpha photons, increasing the Lyman alpha luminosity up to two orders of magnitude. For a halo of \sim 10^10 M_sun, we find that a maximum flux of 5 \times 10^-15 erg cm^-2 s^-1 is obtained for J21 \times f_esc = 0.1, where f_esc is the escape…
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