Nature of Lyman Alpha Blobs: Powered by Extreme Starbursts
Renyue Cen (Princeton), Zheng Zheng (Utah)

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new model explaining Lyman alpha blobs as massive, starbursting proto-clusters, successfully reproducing observed properties and predicting strong FIR sources within LABs, which upcoming observations can test.
Contribution
The model uniquely combines detailed radiative transfer simulations with cosmological hydrodynamics to explain LAB properties and predicts observable FIR signatures.
Findings
Reproduces the luminosity function and size relation of observed LABs.
Explains irregular shapes and large sizes through complex photon propagation.
Predicts strong FIR sources within LABs, testable by ALMA.
Abstract
We present a new model for the observed Lyman alpha blobs (LABs) within the context of the standard cold dark matter model. In this model, LABs are the most massive halos with the strongest clustering (proto-clusters) undergoing extreme starbursts in the high-z universe. Aided by calculations of detailed radiative transfer of Lya photons through ultra-high resolution (159pc) large-scale (>30Mpc) adaptive mesh-refinement cosmological hydrodynamic simulations with galaxy formation, this model is shown to be able to, for the first time, reproduce simultaneously the global Lya luminosity function and luminosity-size relation of the observed LABs. Physically, a combination of dust attenuation of Lya photons within galaxies, clustering of galaxies, and complex propagation of Lya photons through circumgalactic and intergalactic medium gives rise to the large sizes and frequently irregular…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
