Physical properties of Lyman-alpha emitters at z 0.3 from UV-to-FIR measurements
Abstract
The analysis of the physical properties of low-redshift Lyα emitters (LAEs) can provide clues in the study of their high-redshift analogues. At z 0.3, LAEs are bright enough to be detected over almost the entire electromagnetic spectrum and it is possible to carry out a more precise and complete study than at higher redshifts. In this study, we examine the UV and IR emission, dust attenuation, SFR and morphology of a sample of 23 GALEX-discovered star-forming (SF) LAEs at z 0.3 with direct UV (GALEX), optical (ACS) and FIR (PACS and MIPS) data. Using the same UV and IR limiting luminosities, we find that LAEs at z 0.3 tend to be less dusty, have slightly higher total SFRs, have bluer UV continuum slopes, and are much smaller than other galaxies that do not exhibit Lyα emission in their spectrum (non-LAEs). These results suggest that at z 0.3 Lyα photons tend to escape from small galaxies with low dust attenuation. Regarding their morphology, LAEs belong to Irr/merger classes, unlike non-LAEs. Size and morphology represent the most noticeable difference between LAEs and non-LAEs at z 0.3. Furthermore, the comparison of our results with those obtained at higher redshifts indicates that either the Lyα technique picks up different kind of galaxies at different redshifts or that the physical properties of LAEs are evolving with redshift.
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