Cold accretion in early galaxy formation and its Lyman-alpha signatures
Hidenobu Yajima (1), Yuexing Li (2), Qirong Zhu (2), Tom Abel (3) ((1), Osaka University, (2) Pennsylvania State University, (3) Stanford University)

TL;DR
This study combines cosmological simulations and radiative transfer to explore early galaxy formation, revealing that cold gas accretion produces distinctive Lyman-alpha signatures that can be observed at high redshifts.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed simulation approach linking cold accretion to Lyman-alpha emission, providing new insights into early galaxy formation signatures.
Findings
Cold gas accretion drives early galaxy formation at z ~ 24.
Lyman-alpha emission traces cold, dense gas with asymmetric, blue-shifted profiles.
Excitation cooling dominates Lyman-alpha luminosity at z > 6.
Abstract
The Lyman-alpha (Lya) emission has played an important role in detecting high-redshift galaxies, including recently distant ones at redshift z > 7. It may also contain important information on the origin of these galaxies. Here, we investigate the formation of a typical L* galaxy and its observational signatures at the earliest stage, by combining a cosmological hydrodynamic simulation with three-dimensional radiative transfer calculations using the newly improved ART^2 code. Our cosmological simulation uses the Aquila initial condition which zooms in onto a Milky Way-like halo with high resolutions, and our radiative transfer couples multi-wavelength continuum, Lya line, and ionization of hydrogen. We find that the modeled galaxy starts to form at redshift z ~ 24 through efficient accretion of cold gas, which produces a strong Lya line with a luminosity of L(Lya) ~ 10^42 erg/s as early…
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