Nature and chemical abundances of a sample of Lyman-$\alpha$ emitter objects at high redshift
O. L. Dors, B. Agarwal, G. F. Hagele, M. V. Cardaci, C. -E. Rydberg,, R. A. Riffel, A. S. Oliveira, A. C. Krabbe

TL;DR
This study classifies high-redshift Lyman-alpha emitters using photoionization models and emission line data, revealing their ionizing sources and chemical compositions, with implications for understanding early galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive modeling approach combining observational data and diagnostic diagrams to classify and analyze high-redshift LAEs.
Findings
CR7, HSCJ233408+004403, and COSY likely have non-thermal ionizing sources.
RXC J2248.7-4431-ID3 and A1703-zd6 probably host stellar clusters.
LAEs show metallicities between 0.1 and 0.5 solar, with high ionizing photon fluxes.
Abstract
We built a grid of photoionization models and compiled already available observational emission line intensities () of confirmed star formation regions and Active Galactic Nucleus (AGNs) in order to classify five Ly emitter (LAE) objects at high redshift . We selected objects for which at least one metal emission-line was measured. The resulting sample is composed by the objects RXCJ2248.7-4431-ID3, HSCJ233408+004403, COSY, A1703-zd6, and CR7 (clump C). The photoionization models were built assuming a Power Law (associated with the presence of an AGN), a Direct Collapse Black Hole (DCBH), and Population II stars for the ionizing source. The resulting models were then compared with observational emission-line ratios in six diagnostic diagrams to produce a spectral classification of the sample. We found that…
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.
