The nature of luminous Lyman-alpha emitters at z~2-3: maximal dust-poor starbursts and highly ionising AGN
David Sobral, Jorryt Matthee, Behnam Darvish, Ian Smail, Philip N., Best, Lara Alegre, Huub R\"ottgering, Bahram Mobasher, Ana Paulino-Afonso,, Andra Stroe, Iv\'an Oteo

TL;DR
This study investigates luminous Lyman-alpha emitters at redshifts 2-3, revealing a diverse population with many being AGN-dominated or dust-poor starbursts, and identifies a transition point in their nature based on luminosity and UV magnitude.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed spectroscopic analysis of luminous LAEs at z~2-3, distinguishing between AGN and starburst origins and characterizing their physical properties.
Findings
60% of luminous LAEs are AGN-dominated.
40% of luminous LAEs are dust-poor starbursts.
A transition occurs at 2xL*_{Lyα} and 2xM*_{UV}^* between star formation and AGN dominance.
Abstract
Deep narrow-band surveys have revealed a large population of faint Lyman-alpha (Lya) emitters (LAEs) in the distant Universe, but relatively little is known about the most luminous sources ( erg/s; ). Here we present the spectroscopic follow-up of 21 luminous LAEs at z~2-3 found with panoramic narrow-band surveys over five independent extragalactic fields (~4x10 Mpc surveyed at z~2.2 and z~3.1). We use WHT/ISIS, Keck/DEIMOS and VLT/X-SHOOTER to study these sources using high ionisation UV lines. Luminous LAEs at z~2-3 have blue UV slopes (), high Lya escape fractions (%) and span five orders of magnitude in UV luminosity ( to -24). Many (70%) show at least one high ionisation rest-frame UV line such as CIV, NV, CIII], HeII or OIII], typically blue-shifted by…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
