New Constraints on the Lyman Continuum Escape Fraction at z~1.3
Brian Siana (1), Harry I. Teplitz (1), James Colbert (1), Henry C., Ferguson (2), Mark Dickinson (3), Thomas M. Brown (2), Christopher J., Conselice (4), Duilia F. de Mello (5,6), Jonathan P. Gardner (6), Mauro, Giavalisco (7), Felipe Menanteau (8) ((1) Spitzer Science Center

TL;DR
This study uses deep ultraviolet imaging to constrain the Lyman continuum escape fraction at z~1.3, finding most sub-L* galaxies have low escape fractions, indicating a decrease in ionizing photon escape over cosmic time.
Contribution
It provides the first robust limits on the escape fraction for sub-L* galaxies at z~1.3, highlighting a decline compared to higher redshifts.
Findings
Most sub-L* galaxies at z~1.3 have escape fractions less than 0.1.
The average escape fraction at z~1 is less than 0.14.
Escape fractions at z~3 are significantly higher than at z~1.
Abstract
We examine deep far-ultraviolet (1600 Angstrom) imaging of the Hubble Deep Field-North (HDFN) and the Hubble Ultra Deep Field (HUDF) to search for leaking Lyman continuum radiation from starburst galaxies at z~1.3. There are 21 (primarily sub-L*) galaxies with spectroscopic redshifts between 1.1<z<1.5 and none are detected in the far-UV. We fit stellar population templates to the galaxies' optical/near-infrared SEDs to determine the starburst age and level of dust attenuation, giving an accurate estimate of the intrinsic Lyman continuum ratio, f_1500/f_700, and allowing a conversion from f_700 limits to relative escape fractions. We show that previous high-redshift studies may have underestimated the amplitude of the Lyman Break, and thus the relative escape fraction, by a factor of ~2. Once the starburst age and intergalactic HI absorption are accounted for, 18 galaxies in our sample…
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