Lyman-alpha spectral properties of five newly discovered Lyman continuum emitters
A. Verhamme, I. Orlitova, D. Schaerer, Y. Izotov, G. Worseck, T. X., Thuan, N. Guseva

TL;DR
This study analyzes the Lyman-alpha spectral features of five newly discovered low-redshift Lyman continuum emitters, demonstrating their unique spectral signatures and correlating star formation compactness with ionizing photon escape, supporting Lya as a diagnostic tool.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed spectral analysis of these five low-redshift LyC emitters and links their Lya properties to ionizing photon escape, confirming theoretical predictions.
Findings
LCEs are strong Lya emitters with high equivalent widths.
LCEs exhibit double-peaked Lya profiles with small peak separation.
Star formation rate surface density correlates with ionizing photon escape fraction.
Abstract
We have recently reported the discovery of five low redshift Lyman continuum (LyC) emitters (LCEs, hereafter) with absolute escape fractions fesc(LyC) ranging from 6 to 13%, higher than previously found, and which more than doubles the number of low redshift LCEs.We use these observations to test theoretical predictions about a link between the characteristics of the Lyman-alpha (Lya) line from galaxies and the escape of ionising photons. We analyse the Lya spectra of eight LCEs of the local Universe observed with the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph onboard the Hubble Space Telescope (our five leakers and three galaxies from the litterature), and compare their strengths and shapes to the theoretical criteria and comparison samples of local galaxies: the Lyman Alpha Reference Survey, Lyman Break Analogs, Green Peas, and the high-redshift strong LyC leaker Ion2. Our LCEs are found to be…
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