Statistics of 207 Lya Emitters at a Redshift Near 7: Constraints on Reionization and Galaxy Formation Models
Masami Ouchi, Kazuhiro Shimasaku, Hisanori Furusawa, Tomoki Saito,, Makiko Yoshida, Masayuki Akiyama, Yoshiaki Ono, Toru Yamada, Kazuaki Ota,, Nobunari Kashikawa, Masanori Iye, Tadayuki Kodama, Sadanori Okamura, Chris, Simpson, Michitoshi Yoshida

TL;DR
This study analyzes a large sample of Lya emitters at z=6.6 to constrain reionization and galaxy formation models through luminosity functions, clustering, and line profiles, suggesting a mostly ionized IGM at this epoch.
Contribution
It provides the first clustering detection of z=6.6 LAEs and combines multiple observational metrics to constrain the state of the IGM during reionization.
Findings
The Lya luminosity function shows a modest decrease from z=5.7 to 6.6.
Clustering measurements indicate dark halo masses of 10^10-10^11 solar masses.
Line profiles show no significant evolution between z=5.7 and 6.6.
Abstract
We present Lya luminosity function (LF), clustering measurements, and Lya line profiles based on the largest sample, to date, of 207 Lya emitters (LAEs) at z=6.6 on the 1-deg^2 sky of Subaru/XMM-Newton Deep Survey (SXDS) field. Our z=6.6 Lya LF including cosmic variance estimates yields the best-fit Schechter parameters of phi*=8.5 +3.0/-2.2 x10^(-4) Mpc^(-3) and L*(Lya)=4.4 +/-0.6 x10^42 erg s^(-1) with a fixed alpha=-1.5, and indicates a decrease from z=5.7 at the >~90% confidence level. However, this decrease is not large, only =~30% in Lya luminosity, which is too small to be identified in the previous studies. A clustering signal of z=6.6 LAEs is detected for the first time. We obtain the correlation length of r_0=2-5 h^(-1) Mpc and bias of b=3-6, and find no significant boost of clustering amplitude by reionization at z=6.6. The average hosting dark halo mass inferred from…
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