SILVERRUSH. IX. Lya Intensity Mapping with Star-Forming Galaxies at z=5.7 and 6.6: A Possible Detection of Extended Lya Emission at 100 comoving kpc around and beyond the Virial-Radius Scale of Galaxy Dark Matter Halos

Abstract

We present results of the cross-correlation Lyα intensity mapping with Subaru/Hyper Suprime-Cam (HSC) ultra-deep narrowband images and Lyα emitters (LAEs) at z=5.7 and 6.6 in a total area of 4 deg2. Although overwhelming amount of data quality controls have been performed for the narrowband images, we further conduct extensive analysis evaluating systematics of large-scale point-spread-function wings, sky subtractions, and unknown errors based on physically uncorrelated signals and sources found in real HSC images and object catalogs, respectively. Removing the systematics, we carefully calculate cross-correlations between Lyα intensity of the narrowband images and the LAEs. We tentatively identify very diffuse Lyα emission with the 3σ ( 2σ) significance at 100 comoving kpc (ckpc) far from the LAEs at z=5.7 (6.6), around and probably even beyond a virial radius of star-forming galaxies with Mh1011M. The diffuse Lyα emission possibly extends up to 1,000 ckpc with the surface brightness of 10-20-10-19 erg s-1 cm-2 arcsec-2. We confirm that the small-scale (<150 ckpc) Lyα radial profiles of LAEs are consistent with those obtained by recent MUSE observations. Comparisons with numerical simulations suggest that the large-scale (150-1,000 ckpc) Lyα emission are not explained by unresolved faint neighboring galaxies including satellites, but by a combination of Lyα photons emitted from the central LAE and other unknown sources, such as cold-gas streams and galactic outflow. We find no evolution in the Lyα radial profiles of our LAEs from z=5.7 to 6.6, where theoretical models predict a flattening of the profile slope made by cosmic reionization, albeit with our moderately large observational errors.

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