HST narrow-band search for extended Ly-alpha emission around two z>6 quasars
Roberto Decarli, Fabian Walter, Yujin Yang, Chris L. Carilli, Xiahoui, Fan, Joseph F. Hennawi, Jaron Kurk, Dominik Riechers, Hans-Walter Rix,, Michael A. Strauss, Bram P. Venemans

TL;DR
This study used Hubble Space Telescope narrow-band imaging to search for extended Ly-alpha emission around two high-redshift quasars, finding no evidence of such emission and setting upper limits that suggest Ly-alpha suppression mechanisms are at play.
Contribution
First deep narrow-band imaging search for extended Ly-alpha emission around z>6 quasars, providing constraints on Ly-alpha luminosity and implications for quasar host environments.
Findings
No extended Ly-alpha emission detected.
Set upper limits on Ly-alpha luminosity.
No Ly-alpha emitting companions found.
Abstract
We search for extended Ly-alpha emission around two z>6 quasars, SDSS J1030+0524 (z=6.309) and SDSS J1148+5251 (z=6.419) using WFC3 narrow-band filters on board the Hubble Space Telescope. For each quasar, we collected two deep, narrow-band images, one sampling the Ly-alpha line+continuum at the quasar redshifts and one of the continuum emission redwards of the line. After carefully modeling the Point Spread Function, we find no evidence for extended Ly-alpha emission. These observations set 2-sigma limits of L(Ly-alpha, extended) < 3.2 x 10^{44} erg/s for J1030+0524 and L(Ly-alpha, extended) < 2.5 x 10^{44} erg/s for J1148+5251. Given the star formation rates typically inferred from (rest-frame) far-infrared measurements of z~6 quasars, these limits are well below the intrinsic bright Ly-alpha emission expected from the recombination of gas photoionized by the quasars or by the star…
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