Keck Spectroscopy of Faint 3<z<7 Lyman Break Galaxies:- II. A High Fraction of Line Emitters at Redshift Six
Daniel P. Stark, Richard S. Ellis, Masami Ouchi

TL;DR
This study uses deep Keck spectroscopy to show a high fraction of Lyman-alpha emitters among faint z~6 galaxies, indicating ongoing reionization and providing insights into galaxy evolution and the intergalactic medium.
Contribution
It provides the first robust confirmation of increased Lyman-alpha emission at z~6 with deeper data, extending the analysis to higher redshifts and luminosities.
Findings
54% of faint z~6 LBGs show strong Lyman-alpha emission
Lyman-alpha emission fraction increases with redshift from z~4 to z~6
Predicted high success rate for spectroscopic confirmation at z~7
Abstract
As Lyman-alpha photons are scattered by neutral hydrogen, a change with redshift in the Lyman-alpha equivalent width distribution of distant galaxies offers a promising probe of the degree of ionization in the intergalactic medium and hence when cosmic reionization ended. This simple test is complicated by the fact that Lyman-alpha emission can also be affected by the evolving astrophysical details of the host galaxies. In the first paper in this series, we demonstrated both a luminosity and redshift dependent trend in the fraction of Lyman-alpha emitters seen within color-selected Lyman-break galaxies (LBGs) over the range 3<z<6; lower luminosity galaxies and those at higher redshift show an increased likelihood of strong emission. Here we present the results from much deeper 12.5 hour exposures with the Keck DEIMOS spectrograph focused primarily on LBGs at z~6 which enable us to…
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