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Catch Me if You Can: Biased Distribution of Ly$\alpha$-emitting Galaxies according to the Viewing Direction

Authors :
Momose, Rieko
Shimasaku, Kazuhiro
Nagamine, Kentaro
Shimizu, Ikkoh
Kashikawa, Nobunari
Ando, Makoto
Kusakabe, Haruka
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

We report that Ly$\alpha$-emitting galaxies (LAEs) may not faithfully trace the cosmic web of neutral hydrogen (HI), but their distribution is likely biased depending on the viewing direction. We calculate the cross-correlation (CCF) between galaxies and Ly$\alpha$ forest transmission fluctuations on the near and far sides of the galaxies separately, for three galaxy samples at $z\sim2$: LAEs, [OIII] emitters (O3Es), and continuum-selected galaxies. We find that only LAEs have anisotropic CCFs, with the near side one showing lower signals up to $r=3-4~h^{-1}$ comoving Mpc. This means that the average HI density on the near side of LAEs is lower than that on the far-side by a factor of $2.1$ under the Fluctuating Gunn-Peterson Approximation. Mock LAEs created by assigning Ly$\alpha$ equivalent width ($EW_\text{Ly$\alpha$}^\text{obs}$) values to O3Es with an empirical relation also show similar, anisotropic CCFs if we use only objects with higher $EW_\text{Ly$\alpha$}^\text{obs}$ than a certain threshold. These results indicate that galaxies on the far side of a dense region are more difficult to be detected ("hidden") in Ly$\alpha$ because Ly$\alpha$ emission toward us is absorbed by dense neutral hydrogen. If the same region is viewed from a different direction, a different set of LAEs will be selected as if galaxies are playing hide-and-seek using HI gas. Care is needed when using LAEs to search for overdensities.<br />Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, Accepted for publication on ApJL

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2104.10580
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/2041-8213/abf04c