Observations of Ly$\alpha$ Emitters at High Redshift
Masami Ouchi

TL;DR
This paper reviews the observational progress and scientific significance of high-redshift Ly$ extalpha$ emitters, highlighting their roles in galaxy formation, cosmic reionization, and future research prospects.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of the properties, discoveries, and applications of LAEs, emphasizing new insights into their physical characteristics and their use as probes of the early universe.
Findings
LAEs are young, low-mass, high-ionization galaxies with evolving luminosity functions.
Bright Ly$ extalpha$ sources like blobs are rare and their origins are debated.
LAEs contribute significantly to cosmic reionization and are used to study IGM properties.
Abstract
In this series of lectures, I review our observational understanding of high- Ly emitters (LAEs) and relevant scientific topics. Since the discovery of LAEs in the late 1990s, more than ten (one) thousand(s) of LAEs have been identified photometrically (spectroscopically) at to . These large samples of LAEs are useful to address two major astrophysical issues, galaxy formation and cosmic reionization. Statistical studies have revealed the general picture of LAEs' physical properties: young stellar populations, remarkable luminosity function evolutions, compact morphologies, highly ionized inter-stellar media (ISM) with low metal/dust contents, low masses of dark-matter halos. Typical LAEs represent low-mass high- galaxies, high- analogs of dwarf galaxies, some of which are thought to be candidates of population III galaxies. These observational…
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