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HST/ACS Lyman alpha imaging of the nearby starburst ESO338-IG04

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 Added by Matthew Hayes
 Publication date 2005
  fields Physics
and research's language is English
 Authors M. Hayes




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ESO338-IG04 is a well known, local, luminous Blue Compact Galaxy. It has a complex morphology and contains a central young starburst with compact young star clusters. The galaxy was imaged using HST/ACS in the Lyman alpha line and continuum. Using the Starburst99 synthetic spectra and other imaging data from HST/WFPC2 we developed a technique that allows us to make the first photometrically valid continuum subtraction for the LYa line. Our results are in qualitative agreement with the models of LYa escape being regulated by kinematical properties of the interstellar medium. The line-only image shows LYa in both emission and absorption. Notably, emission is seen from central bright young clusters and is in spatial agreement with the features present in a longslit spectrum taken with HST/STIS. Diffuse LYa emission regions are seen surrounding the central starburst where photons escape after one or more resonant scatterings in HI. These regions dominate the total LYa output. Photometry reveals a total LYa flux of 194 x 10^-14 erg/s/cm^2. Inside an artificial aperture matching that of the IUE satelite, we measure a LYa flux and equivalent width consistent with previous studies using the IUE. Analysis of parameter dependencies show our technique to be largely parameter independent, producing LYa maps indistinguishable from one another by eye and with fluxes consistent with one another to better than 50%. By comparison of LYa fluxes with Ha fluxes of a previous study, we estimate that each observed LYa photon has undergone ~2 additional scatterings. We see that LYa line closely correlate with other tracers of kinematics.



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556 - Matthew Hayes 2009
[ABRIDGED] We are undertaking an imaging study of local star-forming galaxies in the Lyman-alpha (Lya) emission line using the Solar Blind Channel (SBC) of the ACS onboard the HST. Observations have been obtained in Lya and H-alpha (Ha) and 6 continuum filters between ~1500AA and the I-band. Previously (Hayes et al 2005) we demonstrated that the production of Lya line-only images in the SBC-only data-set is non-trivial and that supporting data is a requirement. We here develop various methods of continuum subtraction and assess their relative performance using a variety of spectral energy distributions (SED) as input. We conclude that simple assumptions about the behavior of the ultraviolet continuum consistently lead to results that are wildly erroneous, and determine that an SED fitting approach is essential. Moreover, a single component stellar or stellar+nebular spectrum is not always sufficient for realistic template SEDs and, in order to successfully recover the input observables, care must be taken to control contributions of nebular gas and underlying stellar populations. Independent measurements of the metallicity must first be obtained, but details of the initial mass function play only a small role. We identify the need to bin together pixels in our data to obtain signal-to-noise (S/N) of ~10 in each band before processing. At S/N=10 we can recover Lya fluxes accurate to ~30% for Lya lines with intrinsic equivalent width [W(Lya)] of 10AA. This accuracy improves to ~10% for W(Lya)=100AA. We describe the image processing applied to the observations presented in Ostlin et al. (2009) and the associated data-release. We also present simulations for an observing strategy for an alternative low-redshift SBC Lya imaging campaign using adjacent combinations of long-pass filters at slightly higher redshift.
We report upon new results regarding the Lya output of galaxies, derived from the Lyman alpha Reference Sample (LARS), focusing on Hubble Space Telescope imaging. For 14 galaxies we present intensity images in Lya, Halpha, and UV, and maps of Halpha/Hbeta, Lya equivalent width (EW), and Lya/Halpha. We present Lya and UV light profiles and show they are well-fitted by Sersic profiles, but Lya profiles show indices systematically lower than those of the UV (n approx 1-2 instead of >~4). This reveals a general lack of the central concentration in Lya that is ubiquitous in the UV. Photometric growth curves increase more slowly for Lya than the FUV, showing that small apertures may underestimate the EW. For most galaxies, however, flux and EW curves flatten by radii ~10 kpc, suggesting that if placed at high-z, only a few of our galaxies would suffer from large flux losses. We compute global properties of the sample in large apertures, and show total luminosities to be independent of all other quantities. Normalized Lya throughput, however, shows significant correlations: escape is found to be higher in galaxies of lower star formation rate, dust content, mass, and several quantities that suggest harder ionizing continuum and lower metallicity. Eight galaxies could be selected as high-z Lya emitters, based upon their luminosity and EW. We discuss the results in the context of high-z Lya and UV samples. A few galaxies have EWs above 50 AA, and one shows f_escLya of 80%; such objects have not previously been reported at low-z.
We present the first science results from our Hubble Space Telescope Survey for Lyman limit absorption systems (LLS) using the low dispersion spectroscopic modes of the Advanced Camera for Surveys and the Wide Field Camera 3. Through an analysis of 71 quasars, we determine the incidence frequency of LLS per unit redshift and per unit path length, l(z) and l(x) respectively, over the redshift range 1 < z< 2.6, and find a weighted mean of l(x)=0.29 +/-0.05 for 2.0 < z < 2.5 through a joint analysis of our sample and that of Ribaudo et al. (2011). Through stacked spectrum analysis, we determine a median (mean) value of the mean free path to ionizing radiation at z=2.4 of lambda_mfp = 243(252)h^(-1) Mpc, with an error on the mean value of +/- 43h^(-1) Mpc. We also re-evaluate the estimates of lambda_mfp from Prochaska et al. (2009) and place constraints on the evolution of lambda_mfp with redshift, including an estimate of the breakthrough redshift of z = 1.6. Consistent with results at higher z, we find that a significant fraction of the opacity for absorption of ionizing photons comes from systems with N_HI <= 10^{17.5} cm^(-2) with a value for the total Lyman opacity of tau_lyman = 0.40 +/- 0.15. Finally, we determine that at minimum, a 5-parameter (4 power-law) model is needed to describe the column density distribution function f(N_HI, X) at z sim 2.4, find that f(N_HI,X) undergoes no significant change in shape between z sim 2.4 and z sim 3.7, and provide our best fit model for f(N_HI,X).
We examine the dust geometry and Ly{alpha} scattering in the galaxies of the Lyman Alpha Reference Sample (LARS), a set of 14 nearby (0.02 < $z$ < 0.2) Ly{alpha} emitting and starbursting systems with Hubble Space Telescope Ly{alpha}, H{alpha}, and H{beta} imaging. We find that the global dust properties determined by line ratios are consistent with other studies, with some of the LARS galaxies exhibiting clumpy dust media while others of them show significantly lower Ly{alpha} emission compared to their Balmer decrement. With the LARS imaging, we present Ly{alpha}/H{alpha} and H{alpha}/H{beta} maps with spatial resolutions as low as $sim$ 40 pc, and use these data to show that in most galaxies, the dust geometry is best modeled by three distinct regions: a central core where dust acts as a screen, an annulus where dust is distributed in clumps, and an outer envelope where Ly{alpha} photons only scatter. We show that the dust that affects the escape of Ly{alpha} is more restricted to the galaxies central regions, while the larger Ly{alpha} halos are generated by scattering at large radii. We present an empirical modeling technique to quantify how much Ly{alpha} scatters in the halo, and find that this characteristic scattering distance correlates with the measured size of the Ly{alpha} halo. We note that there exists a slight anti-correlation between the scattering distance of Ly{alpha} and global dust properties.
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