Can galactic outflows explain the properties of Ly-alpha emitters?
Alvaro Orsi (1,2, 3), Cedric G. Lacey (3), Carlton M. Baugh (3), ((1) Departamento de Astronomia y Astrofisica, PUC, (2) Centro de, Astro-ingenieria, PUC, (3) Institute for Computational Cosmology, Durham, University)

TL;DR
This study models Ly-alpha photon escape in galaxies using outflow geometries, combining galaxy formation models with radiative transfer simulations to predict observable properties across redshifts.
Contribution
It introduces a novel combination of semi-analytical galaxy formation models with radiative transfer to explore Ly-alpha emission properties with two outflow geometries.
Findings
Shell geometry produces broader, more asymmetric Ly-alpha lines.
Models match observed Ly-alpha escape fractions and line shapes.
Predicted Ly-alpha emitters have lower metallicities and larger sizes.
Abstract
We study the properties of Ly-alpha emitters in a cosmological framework by computing the escape of Ly-alpha photons through galactic outflows. We combine the GALFORM semi-analytical model of galaxy formation with a Monte Carlo Ly-alpha radiative transfer code. The properties of Ly-alpha emitters at 0<z<7 are predicted using two outflow geometries: a Shell of neutral gas and a Wind ejecting material, both expanding at constant velocity. We characterise the differences in the Ly-alpha line profiles predicted by the two outflow geometries in terms of their width, asymmetry and shift from the line centre for a set of outflows with different hydrogen column densities, expansion velocities and metallicities. In general, the Ly-alpha line profile of the Shell geometry is broader and more asymmetric, and the Ly-alpha escape fraction is lower than with the Wind geometry for the same set of…
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