The Stacked Lyman-Alpha Emission Profile from the Circum-Galactic Medium of z~2 Quasars

Abstract

In the context of the FLASHLIGHT survey, we obtained deep narrow band images of 15 z2 quasars with GMOS on Gemini-South in an effort to measure Lyα emission from circum- and inter-galactic gas on scales of hundreds of kpc from the central quasar. We do not detect bright giant Lyα nebulae (SB~10-17 erg s-1 cm-2 arcsec-2 at distances >50 kpc) around any of our sources, although we routinely (47%) detect smaller scale <50 kpc Lyα emission at this SB level emerging from either the extended narrow emission line regions powered by the quasars or by star-formation in their host galaxies. We stack our 15 deep images to study the average extended Lyα surface brightness profile around z2 quasars, carefully PSF-subtracting the unresolved emission component and paying close attention to sources of systematic error. Our analysis, which achieves an unprecedented depth, reveals a surface brightness of SB Lyα10-19 erg s-1 cm-2 arcsec-2 at 200 kpc, with a 2.3σ detection of Lyα emission at SB Lyα=(5.53.1)×10-20 erg s-1 cm-2 arcsec-2 within an annulus spanning 50 kpc <R< 500 kpc from the quasars. Assuming this Lyα emission is powered by fluorescence from highly ionized gas illuminated by the bright central quasar, we deduce an average volume density of n H=0.6×10-2 cm-3 on these large scales. Our results are in broad agreement with the densities suggested by cosmological hydrodynamical simulations of massive (M1012.5M) quasar hosts, however they indicate that the typical quasars at these redshifts are surrounded by gas that is a factor of ~100 times less dense than the (~1 cm-3) gas responsible for the giant bright Lyα nebulae around quasars recently discovered by our group.

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