The MUSE eXtremely Deep Field: Detections of circumgalactic SiII* emission at z>~2
Haruka Kusakabe, Valentin Mauerhofer, Anne Verhamme, Thibault Garel,, Jeremy Blaizot, Lutz Wisotzki, Johan Richard, Leindert A. Boogaard, Floriane, Leclercq, Yucheng Guo, Adelaide Claeyssens, Thierry Contini, Edmund Christian, Herenz, Josephine Kerutt, Michael V. Maseda

TL;DR
This study reports the first detections of extended SiII* emission halos around galaxies at redshifts 2-4, revealing insights into the metal-enriched cool circumgalactic medium during cosmic noon.
Contribution
It provides the first observational evidence of SiII* halos at high redshift and explores their origin, confirming continuum pumping as a plausible mechanism.
Findings
Detected SiII*1533 halos in 5 individual galaxies.
Confirmed SiII* halos in stacked UV-bright galaxy samples.
Supported continuum pumping as the origin of SiII* emission.
Abstract
The circumgalactic medium (CGM) serves as a baryon reservoir that connects galaxies to the intergalactic medium and fuels star formation. The spatial distribution of the metal-enriched cool CGM has not yet been directly revealed at cosmic noon (z~2-4), as bright emission lines at these redshifts are not covered by optical integral field units. To remedy this situation, we aim for the first-ever detections and exploration of extended SiII* emission (low-ionization state, LIS), referred to as ``SiII* halos'', at redshifts ranging from z=2 to 4 as a means to trace the metal-enriched cool CGM. We use a sample of 39 galaxies with systemic redshifts of z=2.1-3.9 measured with the [CIII] doublet in the MUSE Hubble Ultra Deep Field catalog, which contains integration times spanning from ~30 to 140 hours. We search for extended SiII*1265, 1309, 1533 emission (fluorescent lines) around individual…
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