The Lyman Alpha Reference Sample XII: Morphology of extended Lyman alpha emission in star-forming galaxies
Armin Rasekh, Jens Melinder, G\"oran \"Ostlin, Matthew Hayes, Edmund., C. Herenz, Axel Runnholm, Daniel Kunth, J. Miguel Mas Hesse, Anne Verhamme,, John M. Cannon

TL;DR
This study uses Hubble data to analyze the morphology and extent of Lyman-alpha emission in nearby star-forming galaxies, revealing correlations between galaxy structure and Ly$\alpha$ properties, and implications for high-redshift galaxy observations.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of Ly$\alpha$ morphology and halo properties in nearby galaxies, highlighting how these features influence observable measurements and bias in high-redshift studies.
Findings
Galaxies with larger star-forming regions have bigger Ly$\alpha$ halos.
More elongated Ly$\alpha$ morphology correlates with larger Ly$\alpha$ extent.
Faint Ly$\alpha$ emitters have larger scale lengths and halo fractions.
Abstract
We use Hubble space telescope data of 45 nearby star-forming galaxies to investigate properties of Lyman-alpha (Ly) halos, Ly morphology, and the star-forming characteristics of galaxies. We study how the morphology of Ly emission is related to other Ly observables. Furthermore, we study the interdependencies of Ly morphological quantities. We studied the spatial extent of Ly using surface brightness profiles in i) using circular apertures and ii) within faint Ly isophotes. We measured the average intensity and the size of the regions with a high star formation rate density. The morphology of the galaxies was quantified by computing centroid position, axis ratio, and position angle in the Ly, ultraviolet continuum, and I band maps. We found that galaxies with more extended star-forming regions possess larger Ly…
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