Resolving the optical emission lines of Lya blob 'B1' at z=2.38: another hidden quasar
R. A. Overzier, N. P. H. Nesvadba, M. Dijkstra, N. A. Hatch, M. D., Lehnert, M. Villar-Mart\'in, R. J. Wilman, A. W. Zirm

TL;DR
This study uses near-infrared integral field spectroscopy to reveal that the bright Lya blob B1 at z=2.38 hosts a hidden, luminous quasar, suggesting AGN activity is the primary driver of Lya emission in such objects.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed optical emission line resolution of LAB B1, confirming the presence of a hidden quasar and establishing AGN as the main power source for LABs.
Findings
Detection of broad [OIII] and Ha lines indicating AGN activity
High [OIII]/[OII] ratio suggests Seyfert-like ionization
Most luminous LABs likely harbor obscured quasars
Abstract
We have used the SINFONI near-infrared integral field unit on the VLT to resolve the optical emission line structure of one of the brightest (L~1e44 erg/s) and nearest (z=2.38) of all Lya blobs (LABs). The target, known in the literature as object 'B1' (Francis et al. 1996), lies at a redshift where the main optical emission lines are accessible in the observed near-infrared. We detect luminous [OIII]4959,5007A and Ha emission with a spatial extent of at least 32x40 kpc (4"x5"). The dominant optical emission line component shows relatively broad lines (600-800 km/s, FWHM) and line ratios consistent with AGN-photoionization. The new evidence for AGN photoionization, combined with previously detected CIV and luminous, warm infrared emission, suggest that B1 is the site of a hidden quasar. This is confirmed by the fact that [OII] is relatively weak compared to [OIII] (extinction-corrected…
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