Ionization near-zones associated with quasars at z ~ 6
C.L. Carilli (NRAO), Ran Wang (PMO), X. Fan (Arizona), F. Walter, (MPIA), J. Kurk (ESO), D. Riechers (Caltech), J. Wagg (ESO), J. Hennawi, (MPIA), L. Jiang (Arizona), K.M.Menten (MPIfR), F. Bertoldi (Bonn), Michael, A. Strauss (Princeston), P. Cox (IRAM)

TL;DR
This study examines the evolution of quasar near-zones at z ~ 6, revealing a significant increase in size with decreasing redshift, which suggests a rapid reionization process ending around this epoch.
Contribution
It provides a larger sample with more accurate redshifts and confirms the trend of increasing near-zone sizes, offering insights into the timeline of cosmic reionization.
Findings
Near-zone sizes increase as redshift decreases.
Neutral hydrogen fraction decreases by a factor of ~9.4 from z=6.4 to 5.7.
Near-zone size correlates with quasar UV luminosity.
Abstract
We analyze the size evolution of HII regions around 27 quasars between z=5.7 to 6.4 ('quasar near-zones' or NZ). We include more sources than previous studies, and we use more accurate redshifts for the host galaxies, with 8 CO molecular line redshifts and 9 MgII redshifts. We confirm the trend for an increase in NZ size with decreasing redshift, with the luminosity normalized proper size evolving as: R_{NZ,corrected} = (7.4 \pm 0.3) - (8.0 \pm 1.1) \times (z-6) Mpc. While derivation of the absolute neutral fraction remains difficult with this technique, the evolution of the NZ sizes suggests a decrease in the neutral fraction of intergalactic hydrogen by a factor ~ 9.4 from z=6.4 to 5.7, in its simplest interpretation. Alternatively, recent numerical simulations suggest that this rapid increase in near-zone size from z=6.4 to 5.7 is due to the rapid increase in the background…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
