Discovery of faint double-peak Halpha emission in the halo of low redshift galaxies
J. Sanchez Almeida (1, 2), J. Calhau (1, 2), C. Munoz-Tunon (1, and 2), A. L. Gonzalez-Moran (1, 2), J. M. Rodriguez-Espinosa (1, 2, and, 3) ((1) Instituto de Astrofisica de Canarias, La Laguna, Tenerife, E-38200,, Spain, (2) Departamento de Astrofisica, Universidad de La Laguna

TL;DR
This study detects faint double-peak Halpha emission in the halos of low-redshift galaxies, suggesting gas accretion processes, with most signals aligned with galaxy axes and located within the virial radius.
Contribution
First detection of faint double-peak Halpha emission in galaxy halos, indicating potential gas accretion mechanisms and spatial distribution patterns.
Findings
38% of signals show double-peak Halpha profiles
Emission signals are aligned with galaxy major axes
Signals predominantly within the virial radius of galaxies
Abstract
Aiming at the detection of cosmological gas being accreted onto galaxies of the local Universe, we examined the Halpha emission in the halo of 164 galaxies in the field of view of the Multi-Unit Spectroscopic Explorer Wide survey (\musew ) with observable Halpha (redshift < 0.42). An exhaustive screening of the corresponding Halpha images led us to select 118 reliable Halpha emitting gas clouds. The signals are faint, with a surface brightness of 10**(-17.3 pm 0.3) erg/s/cm2/arcsec2. Through statistical tests and other arguments, we ruled out that they are created by instrumental artifacts, telluric line residuals, or high redshift interlopers. Around 38% of the time, the Halpha line profile shows a double peak with the drop in intensity at the rest-frame of the central galaxy, and with a typical peak-to-peak separation of the order of pm 200 km/s. Most line emission clumps are…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Electrical and Electromagnetic Research
