A galaxy as the source of a Civ absorption system close to the epoch of reionization
C. Gonzalo Diaz (1), Emma V. Ryan-Weber (1), Jeff Cooke (1), Max, Pettini (2,3), Piero Madau (4). ((1) Centre for Astrophysics &, Supercomputing, Swinburne University of Technology (2) Institute of, Astronomy, University of Cambridge (3) Kavli Institute for Cosmology,

TL;DR
This study identifies a high-redshift galaxy near a Civ absorption system, providing evidence for early galaxy-driven metal enrichment of the intergalactic medium during the epoch of reionization.
Contribution
It presents the highest redshift galaxy-absorber pair detected, supporting early galaxy outflows as sources of intergalactic metals at z~6.
Findings
Detected a galaxy at z=5.719 near a Civ absorber at z=5.724.
Supports galaxy outflows as sources of intergalactic metals at high redshift.
Shows that color selection methods may miss some high-z blue galaxies.
Abstract
We find a bright (L_{UV}=2.5 L*_{z=6}) Lyman alpha emitter at redshift z=5.719 at a projected distance of 79 physical kpc from a strong triply ionized carbon (Civ) absorption system at redshift z=5.7238 previously reported in the spectrum of the z_{em} = 6.309 QSO SDSS J1030+0524. This is the highest redshift galaxy-absorber pair detected to-date, supporting the idea that galaxy-wide outflows were already in place at the end of the epoch of reionization. The proximity of this object makes it the most likely source of metals, consistent with models of outflows at lower redshift where significant observational evidence relates metal absorption systems with galaxies hosting outflows. In a typical outflow scenario, a wind of 200 km/s, active since the universe was only 0.6 Gyr old (z ~8.4), could eject metals out to 79 kpc at z=5.719. Although the origin of metals in the intergalactic…
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