Understanding Lyman-alpha Nebulae at Low Redshift I: The Sizes, Powering, and Kinematics of "Green Bean" Galaxies
Moire K. M. Prescott (1), Kelly N. Sanderson (1) ((1) New Mexico, State University)

TL;DR
This study investigates low-redshift Lyman-alpha nebulae, called 'Green Beans', revealing they are powered by Type 2 AGN with specific size, kinematic, and spectral properties, and are related to high-redshift Lya nebulae.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed spectroscopic analysis of low-z Lya nebulae, establishing their connection to Type 2 AGN and comparing their properties to other emission line sources.
Findings
Low-z Lya nebulae have AGN-like emission line ratios.
They exhibit narrow line widths (<1000 km/s).
They resemble Type 2 AGN in size and kinematics.
Abstract
A new but rare sample of spatially extended emission line nebulae, nicknamed "Green Beans", was discovered at z~0.3 thanks to strong [OIII] emission, and subsequently shown to be local cousins of the Lyman-alpha (Lya) nebulae found at high redshift. Here we use follow-up APO/DIS spectroscopy to better understand how these low redshift Lya nebulae compare to other populations of strong emission line sources. Our spectroscopic data show that low-z Lya nebulae have AGN-like emission line ratios, relatively narrow line widths (FWHM<1000 km s^{-1}), and emission line kinematics resembling those of Type 2 AGN at the same redshift, confirming that they are powered by Type 2 AGN with typical ionizing continua. While low-z Lya nebulae are larger and less concentrated than compact, star-forming Green Pea galaxies, we find that they resemble typical Type 2 AGN in terms of r-band concentration and…
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