Brighter and More Massive Galaxies in the Vicinity of Lyman-alpha Nebulae
Natalie K. Wells, Moire K. M. Prescott, Kristian M. Finlator

TL;DR
This study shows that galaxies near Lyman-alpha nebulae at z~2.3 are brighter, more massive, and have higher star formation rates than field galaxies, indicating environmental influence on galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It provides the first statistical comparison of galaxy properties near Lyman-alpha nebulae with field galaxies at high redshift, revealing environmental effects.
Findings
Galaxies near nebulae are brighter and more massive.
Environmental influence accelerates galaxy evolution.
Lyman-alpha nebulae trace overdense regions at z~2.3.
Abstract
It has been well established in the local universe that galaxy properties differ based on the large-scale environment in which they reside. As luminous Lyman-alpha nebulae have been shown to trace overdense environments at z~2-3, comparing the properties of galaxies within Lyman-alpha nebulae systems to those in the field can provide insight into how and when locally-observed trends between galaxy properties and environment emerged. Six Lyman-alpha nebulae were discovered at z~2.3 in a blind search of the GOODS-S extragalactic field, a region also covered by the 3D-HST spectroscopic survey. Utilizing 3D-HST data, we identified 86 galaxies in the vicinity of these nebulae and used statistical tests to compare their physical properties to galaxies elsewhere in the field. Galaxies lying within 320 proper kpc of a Lyman-alpha nebula are roughly half a magnitude brighter than those in the…
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