Probing the Physical Properties of z=4.5 Lyman Alpha Emitters with Spitzer
Keely D. Finkelstein, Steven L. Finkelstein (UT Austin), Vithal Tilvi,, Sangeeta Malhotra, James E. Rhoads (ASU), Norman A. Grogin, Norbert Pirzkal, (STScI), Arjun Dey (NOAO), Buell T. Jannuzi (Steward Obsv.), Bahram Mobasher, (UC Riverside), Sabrina Pakzad (Gemini Obsv.)

TL;DR
This study analyzes the stellar populations of high-redshift Lyman alpha emitters using deep Spitzer and Hubble imaging, revealing diverse ages, masses, and star formation rates, and suggesting different galaxy populations at z=4.5.
Contribution
It provides one of the largest IRAC-based stellar population analyses of z>4 LAEs, highlighting their mass, age, and star formation diversity and potential different mechanisms for Lyman alpha escape.
Findings
19% of z=4.5 LAEs detected in IRAC bands.
Stellar masses range from 5x10^8 to 10^11 Msol.
Higher mass LAEs have elevated SFRs, with the most massive similar to lower-redshift galaxies.
Abstract
We present the results from a stellar population modeling analysis of a sample of 162 z=4.5, and 14 z=5.7 Lyman alpha emitting galaxies (LAEs) in the Bootes field, using deep Spitzer/IRAC data at 3.6 and 4.5 um from the Spitzer Lyman Alpha Survey, along with Hubble Space Telescope NICMOS and WFC3 imaging at 1.1 and 1.6 um for a subset of the LAEs. This represents one of the largest samples of high-redshift LAEs imaged with Spitzer IRAC. We find that 30/162 (19%) of the z=4.5 LAEs and 9/14 (64%) of the z=5.7 LAEs are detected at >3-sigma in at least one IRAC band. Individual z=4.5 IRAC-detected LAEs have a large range of stellar mass, from 5x10^8 to 10^11 Msol. One-third of the IRAC-detected LAEs have older stellar population ages of 100 Myr - 1 Gyr, while the remainder have ages < 100 Myr. A stacking analysis of IRAC-undetected LAEs shows this population to be primarily low mass (8 --…
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