The Size and Pervasiveness of Ly$\alpha$-UV Spatial Offsets in Star-Forming Galaxies at $z\sim6$
B. C. Lemaux, S. Fuller, M. Brada\v{c}, L. Pentericci, A. Hoag, V., Strait, T. Treu, C. Alvarez, P. Bolan, P. J. Gandhi, T. Jones, C. Mason, D., Pelliccia, B. Ribeiro, R. E. Ryan, K. B. Schmidt, E. Vanzella, Y. Khusanova,, O. Le F\`evre, L. Guaita, N. P. Hathi, A. Koekemoer

TL;DR
This study investigates the spatial offsets between Ly$ extalpha$ emission and UV continuum in high-redshift star-forming galaxies, revealing their typical sizes, lack of evolution with redshift, and implications for spectroscopic observations.
Contribution
First analysis of Ly$ extalpha$-UV offsets at $z\sim6$, quantifying their sizes, dependence on UV brightness, and impact on observational slit losses.
Findings
~40% of galaxies show significant offsets
Average offset is 0.61$ ext{kpc}$, with some up to 4 kpc
Offsets can severely affect slit spectroscopy, especially with narrow slits
Abstract
We study the projected spatial offset between the ultraviolet continuum and Ly emission for 65 lensed and unlensed galaxies in the Epoch of Reionization (), the first such study at these redshifts, in order to understand the potential for these offsets to confuse estimates of the Ly properties of galaxies observed in slit spectroscopy. While we find that ~40% of galaxies in our sample show significant projected spatial offsets (), we find a modest average offset of 0.610.08 kpc. A small fraction of our sample, ~10%, exhibits offsets of 2-4 kpc, sizes that are larger than the effective radii of typical galaxies at these redshifts. An internal comparison and a comparison to studies at lower redshift yielded no significant evidence of evolution of with redshift. In our own sample, UV-bright galaxies showed…
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