Lyman-Alpha Escape from Low-Mass, Compact, High-Redshift Galaxies
Ragadeepika Pucha, Naveen A. Reddy, Arjun Dey, St\'ephanie Juneau,, Kyoung-Soo Lee, Moire K. M. Prescott, Irene Shivaei, Sungryong Hong

TL;DR
This study examines how galaxy properties like size, stellar mass, and star formation influence Lyman-alpha photon escape in high-redshift galaxies, revealing that compact, low-mass galaxies favor Ly$ ext{α}$ escape and impact cosmic reionization.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the relationship between galaxy compactness, stellar mass, and Ly$ ext{α}$ escape, emphasizing the role of star formation concentration and gravitational potential.
Findings
Lower stellar mass LAEs have higher Ly$ ext{α}$ escape fractions at a given star formation surface density.
LAEs exhibit higher specific star-formation-rate surface densities compared to typical star-forming galaxies.
Compact star formation in low gravitational potential galaxies facilitates Ly$ ext{α}$ photon escape.
Abstract
We investigate the effects of stellar populations and sizes on Ly escape in 27 spectroscopically confirmed and 35 photometric Lyman-Alpha Emitters (LAEs) at z 2.65 in seven fields of the Bo\"otes region of the NOAO Deep Wide-Field Survey. We use deep /WFC3 imaging to supplement ground-based observations and infer key galaxy properties. Compared to typical star-forming galaxies (SFGs) at similar redshifts, the LAEs are less massive (), younger (ages 1 Gyr), smaller ( 1 kpc), less dust-attenuated (E(BV) 0.26 mag), but have comparable star-formation-rates (SFRs ). Some of the LAEs in the sample may be very young galaxies having low nebular metallicities () and/or high ionization parameters ($\log{(\rm U)} \gtrsim…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Superconducting and THz Device Technology
