AGN-driven outflows and the formation of Ly$\alpha$ nebulae around high-z quasars
Tiago Costa (1), Fabrizio Arrigoni Battaia (1), Emanuele P. Farina, (2), Laura C. Keating (3), Joakim Rosdahl (4), Taysun Kimm (5) ((1) MPA,, Garching, Germany, (2) Gemini Observatory, Hilo, Hawaii, USA, (3) AIP,, Potsdam, Germany, (4) CRAL, Lyon, France, (5) Yonsei University

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations and radiative transfer modeling to explain the origin of extended Ly$ ext{alpha}$ nebulae around high-redshift quasars, highlighting the role of AGN-driven outflows in their formation.
Contribution
It demonstrates that quasar-powered outflows are essential for producing observed Ly$ ext{alpha}$ nebulae, confirming early AGN feedback in massive high-redshift halos.
Findings
Ly$ ext{alpha}$ emission can be powered by recombination and collisionally excited gas.
Resonant scattering of quasar Ly$ ext{alpha}$ line can produce extended emission.
Quasar outflows are necessary to match observed nebulae properties.
Abstract
The detection of Ly nebulae around quasars provides evidence for extended gas reservoirs around the first rapidly growing supermassive black holes. Observations of quasars can be explained by cosmological models provided that the black holes by which they are powered evolve in rare, massive dark matter haloes. Whether these theoretical models also explain the observed extended Ly emission remains an open question. We post-process a suite of cosmological, radiation-hydrodynamic simulations targeting a quasar host halo at with the Ly radiative transfer code RASCAS. A combination of recombination radiation from photo-ionised hydrogen and emission from collisionally excited gas powers Ly nebulae with a surface brightness profile in close agreement with observations. We also find that, even on its own, resonant scattering of the…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
