%0 Journal Article %T Puzzling Lyman-alpha line profiles in green pea galaxies %A A. Henry %A A. Jaskot %A A. Verhamme %A C. Scarlata %A D. Schaerer %A I. Orlitov¨¢ %A M. S. Oey %J - %D 2018 %R 10.1051/0004-6361/201732478 %X Context. The Lyman-alpha (Ly¦Á) line of hydrogen is of prime importance for detecting galaxies at high redshift. For a correct data interpretation, numerical radiative transfer models are necessary due to Ly¦Á resonant scattering off neutral hydrogen atoms.Aims. Recent observations have discovered an escape of ionizing Lyman-continuum radiation from a population of compact, actively star-forming galaxies at redshift z ~ 0.2£¿0.3, also known as ¡°green peas¡±. For the potential similarities with high-redshift galaxies and impact on the reionization of the universe, we study the green pea Ly¦Á spectra, which are mostly double-peaked, unlike in any other galaxy sample. If the double peaks are a result of radiative transfer, they can be a useful source of information on the green pea interstellar medium and ionizing radiation escape.Methods. We select a sample of twelve archival green peas and we apply numerical radiative transfer models to reproduce the observed Ly¦Á spectral profiles, using the geometry of expanding, homogeneous spherical shells. We use ancillary optical and ultraviolet data to constrain the model parameters, and we evaluate the match between the models and the observed Ly¦Á spectra. As a second step, we allow all the fitting parameters to be free, and examine the agreement between the interstellar medium parameters derived from the models and those from ancillary data.Results. The peculiar green pea double-peaked Ly¦Á line profiles are not correctly reproduced by the constrained shell models. Conversely, unconstrained models fit the spectra, but parameters derived from the best-fitting models are not in agreement with the ancillary data. In particular: 1) the best-fit systemic redshifts are larger by 10¨C250 km s£¿1 than those derived from optical emission lines; 2) the double-peaked Ly¦Á profiles are best reproduced with low-velocity (£¿150 km s£¿1) outflows that contradict the observed ultraviolet absorption lines of low-ionization-state elements with characteristic velocities as large as 300 km s£¿1; and 3) the models need to consider intrinsic Ly¦Á profiles that are on average three times broader than the observed Balmer lines.Conclusions. Differences between the modelled and observed velocities are larger for targets with prominent Ly¦Á blue peaks. The blue peak position and flux appear to be connected to low column densities of neutral hydrogen, leading to Ly¦Á and Lyman-continuum escape. This is at odds %U https://www.aanda.org/articles/aa/full_html/2018/08/aa32478-17/aa32478-17.html