A double-peaked Lyman-$\alpha$ emitter with a strong blue peak multiply imaged by the galaxy cluster RXC J0018.5+1626
Lukas J. Furtak (1), Ad\`ele Plat (2), Adi Zitrin (1), Micheal Topping, (2), Daniel P. Stark (2), Victoria Strait (3, 4), St\'ephane Charlot (5),, Dan Coe (6), Felipe Andrade-Santos (7), Maru\v{s}a Brada\v{c} (8, 9),, Larry Bradley (6), Brian C. Lemaux (9, 10)

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a strongly lensed, double-peaked Ly$ ext{α}$ emitter at z=3.2177 with a prominent blue peak, providing insights into galaxy inflows, low HI column densities, and potential LyC escape at high redshift.
Contribution
First detection of a multiply imaged, double-peaked Ly$ ext{α}$ emitter with a dominant blue peak, revealing inflow signatures and low HI content in a high-redshift galaxy.
Findings
Double-peaked Ly$ ext{α}$ emission with a stronger blue peak.
High Ly$ ext{α}$ equivalent width of 63 Å.
Galaxy magnified by factors of 7-10, enabling detailed study.
Abstract
We report the discovery of a double-peaked Lyman- (Ly) emitter (LAE) at in VLT/MUSE data. The galaxy is strongly lensed by the galaxy cluster RXC~J0018.5+1626 recently observed in the RELICS survey, and the double-peaked Ly emission is clearly detected in the two counter images in the MUSE field-of-view. We measure a relatively high Ly rest-frame equivalent width (EW) of . Additional near-infrared (NIR) spectroscopy allows us to measure the H, [OIII] and [OIII] emission lines, which show moderate rest-frame EWs of the order of a few , an [OIII]/H ratio of , and a lower limit on the [OIII]/[OII] ratio of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdaptive optics and wavefront sensing · Calibration and Measurement Techniques
