Effect of the intergalactic environment on the observability of Ly-alpha emitters during reionization
Ilian T. Iliev (1,2), Paul R. Shapiro (3), Patrick McDonald (2),, Garrelt Mellema (4), Ue-Li Pen (2) ((1) ITP, Zurich, (2) CITA, (3) UT Austin,, (4) Stockholm)

TL;DR
This study uses large simulations to analyze how the reionizing intergalactic medium affects the observability and characteristics of high-redshift Ly-alpha emitters, revealing significant anisotropy, velocity effects, and implications for reionization sources.
Contribution
It provides a self-consistent simulation-based analysis of Ly-alpha emitter observability during reionization, including effects of IGM structure, velocity, and clustering, and compares results with observations.
Findings
Large anisotropy causes significant line-of-sight opacity variations.
Velocity effects influence line profiles and suppress bright sources.
Most reionization sources are faint and undetectable with current surveys.
Abstract
Observations of high-redshift Ly-alpha sources are a major tool for studying the high-redshift Universe. We discuss the effect of the reionizing intergalactic medium on the observability of Ly-alpha sources based on large simulations of early structure formation with radiative transfer. This takes into account self-consistently the reionization history, density, velocity and ionization structures and nonlinear source clustering. We find that all fields are highly anisotropic and as a consequence there are very large variations in opacity among the different lines-of-sight. The velocity effects, from both infall and source peculiar velocity are most important for the luminous sources, affecting the line profile and depressing the bright end of the luminosity function. The line profiles are generally asymmetric and the line centers of the luminous sources are always absorbed due to the…
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