Contamination on Lyman continuum emission at z >= 3: implication on the ionising radiation evolution
E. Vanzella, B. Siana, S. Cristiani, M. Nonino

TL;DR
This study assesses the likelihood and impact of low-redshift interlopers contaminating measurements of Lyman continuum emission from high-redshift galaxies, revealing significant potential biases in current estimates.
Contribution
It quantifies contamination probabilities using deep U-band counts and simulations, highlighting the need to reconsider previous Lyman continuum measurements at z>=3.
Findings
Contamination probability can be as high as 12.6% for 1.0" radius resolution.
Over 50% chance that at least one-third of z~3 Lyman continuum detections are contaminated.
Foreground sources can significantly bias the observed ionising radiation estimates.
Abstract
We investigate the possibility of contamination by lower-redshift interlopers in the measure of the ionising radiation escaping from high redshift galaxies. Taking advantage of the new ultra-deep VLT/VIMOS U-band number counts in the GOODS-S field,we calculate the expected probability of contamination by low-z interlopers as a function of the U-mag and the image spatial resolution (PSF). Assuming that ground-based observations can not resolve objects lying within a 0.5" radius of each other, then each z>=3 galaxy has a 2.1 and 3.2% chance of foreground contamination, adopting surface density U-band number counts down to 27.5 and 28.5,respectively. Those probabilities increase to 8.5 and 12.6%, assuming 1.0" radius. If applied to the estimates reported in the literature at z~3 for which a Lyman continuum has been observed directly,the probability that at least 1/3 of them are affected by…
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