Mapping the Lyman-Alpha Emission Around a z~6.6 QSO with MUSE: Extended Emission and a Companion at Close Separation
Emanuele P. Farina, Bram P. Venemans, Roberto Decarli, Joseph F., Hennawi, Fabian Walter, Eduardo Ba\~nados, Chiara Mazzucchelli, Sebastiano, Cantalupo, Fabrizio Arrigoni-Battaia, and Ian D. McGreer

TL;DR
This study uses MUSE/VLT to detect extended Lyman-Alpha emission around a z~6.6 QSO, revealing a nebula and a nearby galaxy, providing insights into early galaxy and black hole formation.
Contribution
First detection of a 9 kpc Lyman-Alpha nebula and a close companion galaxy around a z~6.6 QSO, highlighting the environment of early supermassive black holes.
Findings
Lyman-Alpha nebula extends 9 kpc with luminosity 3.0x10^42 erg/s
Detected a nearby Lyman-Alpha emitter with SFR ~1.3 M_sun/yr
Lyman-Alpha emission likely due to fluorescence of optically thin gas
Abstract
We utilize the Multi Unit Spectroscopic Explorer (MUSE) on the Very Large Telescope (VLT) to search for extended Lyman-Alpha emission around the z~6.6 QSO J0305-3150. After carefully subtracting the point-spread-function, we reach a nominal 5-sigma surface brightness limit of SB = 1.9x10 erg/s/cm/arcsec over a 1 arcsec aperture, collapsing 5 wavelength slices centered at the expected location of the redshifted Lyman-Alpha emission (i.e. at 9256 Ang.). Current data suggest the presence (5-sigma, accounting for systematics) of a Lyman-Alpha nebula that extends for 9 kpc around the QSO. This emission is displaced and redshifted by 155 km/s with respect to the location of the QSO host galaxy traced by the [CII] emission line. The total luminosity is L = 3.0x10 erg/s. Our analysis suggests that this emission is unlikely to rise from optically thick clouds…
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