Extended Lyman-alpha emission from cold accretion streams
J. Rosdahl, J. Blaizot

TL;DR
This study uses advanced cosmological simulations to explore the observability of cold accretion streams via Lyman-alpha emission at redshift 3, assessing their role in powering Lyman-alpha blobs and predicting observational signatures.
Contribution
It provides the first self-consistent modeling of self-shielding in cold streams, linking gravitational heating to Lyman-alpha luminosity and morphology in massive halos.
Findings
Cold streams in ~10^11 solar mass halos show 10-20% gravitational heating efficiency.
Lyman-alpha emission is concentrated near the halo centers, not extended.
Cold accretion can produce Lyman-alpha blobs consistent with observations, with some over-prediction of abundance.
Abstract
{Abridged} We investigate the observability of cold accretion streams at redshift 3 via Lyman-alpha (Lya) emission and the feasibility of cold accretion as the main driver of Lya blobs (LABs). We run cosmological zoom simulations focusing on 3 halos spanning two orders of magnitude in mass, roughly from 10^11 to 10^13 solar masses. We use a version of the Ramses code that includes radiative transfer of UV photons, and we employ a refinement strategy that allows us to resolve accretion streams in their natural environment to an unprecedented level. For the first time, we self-consistently model self-shielding in the cold streams from the cosmological UV background, which enables us to predict their temperatures, ionization states and Lya luminosities with improved accuracy. We find the efficiency of gravitational heating in cold streams in a ~10^11 solar mass halo is around 10-20%…
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