Constraining the geometry of the gas surrounding a typical galaxy at $z = 3.4$ with Ly$\alpha$ polarization
A. Bolamperti, S.-J. Chang, J. Vernet, A. Zanella, M. Gronke, F., Arrigoni Battaia, F. Calura, E. Iani, E. Vanzella

TL;DR
This study uses Ly$ extalpha$ polarization measurements and radiative transfer models to constrain the gas geometry around a typical galaxy at z=3.4, revealing insights into the circumgalactic medium and outflow structures.
Contribution
First spectropolarimetric observations of a star-forming galaxy at z~3.4 are combined with new radiative transfer models to constrain the CGM geometry using Ly$ extalpha$ polarization.
Findings
Ly$ extalpha$ polarization degree is less than 4.6%.
Models suggest a biconical outflow geometry with specific opening angles.
Polarization constraints complement spectral line profile analyses.
Abstract
Ly emission is the strongest tracer of recombining ionized hydrogen in young, star-forming galaxies, but its origin is still debated. Ly arises when emitted photons scatter in neutral hydrogen and, so far, observational efforts have mostly focused on the Ly surface brightness and spectral profile, which depend on the neutral hydrogen column density, geometry, kinematics, powering mechanism and on the region from which the photons are emitted. Different processes produce similar spectra, but have different degrees of polarization, that we can use to discriminate between them. In this paper, we present the first spectropolarimetric observations of a typical star-forming galaxy at , strongly lensed by the cluster of galaxies Abell 2895, taken with the PMOS mode of the VLT/FORS2 instrument. We measure a Ly degree of polarization upper…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCosmology and Gravitation Theories · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
