Evolution of the Intergalactic Opacity: Implications for the Ionizing Background, Cosmic Star Formation, and Quasar Activity
C.-A. Faucher-Giguere, A. Lidz, L. Hernquist, M. Zaldarriaga (Harvard, University)

TL;DR
This study uses Lya forest opacity measurements to analyze the evolution of intergalactic opacity and its impact on cosmic ionization, star formation, and quasar activity, revealing galaxies' dominant role in hydrogen reionization at high redshift.
Contribution
It provides new constraints on the evolution of the cosmic UV background and demonstrates that star-forming galaxies likely dominate hydrogen reionization at z>3, with implications for star formation history models.
Findings
Galaxies require only 0.5% escape fraction of ionizing photons to account for the background.
Current star formation rate estimates underestimate the photoionization rate at z~4.
Quasars can reionize helium by z~3 and significantly contribute to hydrogen ionization at z~2.
Abstract
We investigate the implications of the intergalactic opacity for the evolution of the cosmic UV luminosity density and its sources. Our main constraint is our measurement of the Lya forest opacity at redshifts 2<z<4.2 from 86 high-resolution quasar spectra. In addition, we impose the requirements that HI must be reionized by z=6 and HeII by z~3, and consider estimates of the hardness of the ionizing background from HI to HeII column density ratios. The derived hydrogen photoionization rate is remarkably flat over the Lya forest redshift range covered. Because the quasar luminosity function is strongly peaked near z~2, the lack of redshift evolution indicates that star-forming galaxies likely dominate the photoionization rate at z>~3. Combined with direct measurements of the galaxy UV luminosity function, this requires only a small fraction f_esc~0.5% of galactic hydrogen ionizing…
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