Prospects for detecting cosmic filaments in Lyman-alpha emission across redshifts $z=2-5$
Yizhou Liu, Liang Gao, Shihong Liao, Kai Zhu

TL;DR
This study uses hydrodynamical simulations and mock observations to assess the detectability of cosmic filaments in Lyman-alpha emission across redshifts 2-5, highlighting the potential of future telescopes like the ELT.
Contribution
It demonstrates how the upcoming ELT can significantly improve the detection of diffuse cosmic filaments in Lyman-alpha emission compared to current instruments.
Findings
Surface brightness of filaments brighter at lower redshifts.
ELT can detect finer filamentary structures outside galaxies.
Detection feasibility increases with future telescope capabilities.
Abstract
The standard CDM cosmological model predicts that a large amount of diffuse neutral hydrogen distributes in cosmic filaments, which could be mapped through Lyman-alpha (Ly) emission observations. We use the hydrodynamical simulation Illustris-TNG50 to investigate the evolution of surface brightness and detectability of neutral hydrogen in cosmic filaments across redshifts . While the HI column density of cosmic filaments decreases with redshift, due to the rising temperature with cosmic time in filaments, the surface brightness of Ly emission in filaments is brighter at lower redshifts, suggesting that the detection of cosmic filaments is more feasible at lower redshifts. However, most of the Ly emission from cosmic filaments is around , making it extremely challenging to detect with current…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Scientific Research and Discoveries · Photocathodes and Microchannel Plates
