Confirmation of double peaked Lyman-alpha emission at z=6.593: Witnessing a galaxy directly contributing to the reionisation of the Universe
Jorryt Matthee, David Sobral, Max Gronke, Ana Paulino-Afonso, Mauro, Stefanon, Huub R\"ottgering

TL;DR
This study confirms the first double-peaked Lyman-alpha emitter at z>6, providing direct evidence of galaxies contributing to cosmic reionisation through detailed high-resolution spectroscopy and analysis.
Contribution
It presents the first confirmed detection of a double-peaked Lyman-alpha emitter at z=6.593, demonstrating its role in reionisation and analyzing its properties with high-resolution data.
Findings
COLA1 is a genuine double-peaked LAE at z=6.593.
It has high UV luminosity and low metallicity.
The galaxy likely contributes significantly to reionisation.
Abstract
Distant luminous Lyman-alpha emitters (LAEs) are excellent targets for spectroscopic observations of galaxies in the epoch of reionisation (EoR). We present deep high-resolution (R=5000) VLT/X-SHOOTER observations, along with an extensive collection of photometric data of `COLA1', a proposed double peaked LAE at z=6.6 (Hu et al. 2016). We rule out that COLA1's emission line is an [OII] doublet at z=1.475 on the basis of i) the asymmetric red line-profile and flux ratio of the peaks (blue/red=) and ii) an unphysical [OII]/Ha ratio ([OII]/Ha > 22). We show that COLA1's observed B-band flux is explained by a faint extended foreground LAE, for which we detect Lya and [OIII] at z=2.142. We thus conclude that COLA1 is a real double-peaked LAE at z=6.593, the first discovered at z>6, confirming the result from Hu et al. (2016). COLA1 is UV luminous (M), has a…
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.
Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
