MUSE observations towards the lensing cluster A2744: Intersection between the LBG and LAE populations at z $\sim$ 3-7
G. de La Vieuville, R. Pell\'o, J. Richard, G. Mahler, L. L\'ev\^eque,, F. E. Bauer, D. J. Lagattuta, J. Blaizot, T. Contini, L. Guaita, H. Kusakabe,, N. Laporte, J. Martinez, M. V. Maseda, D. Schaerer, K. B. Schmidt, and A., Verhamme

TL;DR
This study uses MUSE observations behind the A2744 cluster to analyze the overlap and properties of Lyman break galaxies and Lyman-alpha emitters at redshifts 3 to 7, revealing insights into faint galaxy populations and their evolution.
Contribution
It provides a detailed comparison of LBG and LAE populations at high redshift, especially for intrinsically faint galaxies, and explores their properties and evolution using lensing data.
Findings
LAE fraction increases with redshift up to z~6
LAE selection identifies UV faint galaxies missed in photometric surveys
No intrinsic difference found between LBG and LAE populations
Abstract
We present a study of the intersection between the populations of star forming galaxies (SFGs) selected as either Lyman break galaxies (LBGs) or Lyman-alpha emitters (LAEs) in the redshift range 2.9 - 6.7, within the same volume of universe sampled by the Multi-Unit Spectroscopic Explorer (MUSE) behind the Hubble Frontier Fields lensing cluster A2744. We define three samples of star-forming galaxies: LBG galaxies with an LAE counterpart (92 galaxies), LBG galaxies without LAE counterpart (408 galaxies) and LAE galaxies without an LBG counterpart (46 galaxies). All these galaxies are intrinsically faint due to the lensing nature of the sample (Muv -20.5). The fraction of LAEs among all selected SFGs increases with redshift up to z 6 and decreases for higher redshifts. The evolution of LAE/LBG populations with UV magnitude and Lya luminosity shows that the LAE selection is…
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