Evolution of the observed Ly-alpha luminosity function from z = 6.5 to z = 7.7: evidence for the epoch of reionization ?
B. Cl\'ement, J.-G. Cuby, F. Courbin, A. Fontana, W. Freudling, J., Fynbo, J. Gallego, P. Hibon, J.-P. Kneib, O. Le F\`evre, C. Lidman, R., McMahon, B. Milvang-Jensen, P. Moller, A. Moorwood, K.K. Nilsson, L., Pentericci, B. Venemans, V. Villar, J. Willis

TL;DR
This study searches for Ly-alpha emitters at redshift 7.7 to understand the state of the intergalactic medium during reionization, finding no candidates and thus constraining the evolution of the Ly-alpha luminosity function.
Contribution
First observational constraints on the Ly-alpha luminosity function at z=7.7 using deep narrow-band imaging and gravitational lensing, indicating possible rapid evolution during reionization.
Findings
No LAE candidates detected at z=7.7 down to magnitude ~26.
Constraints suggest significant evolution of the Ly-alpha LF between z=6.5 and z=7.7.
Results imply increased neutral hydrogen fraction in the IGM at z=7.7.
Abstract
Aims. Ly-alpha emitters (LAEs) can be detected out to very high redshifts during the epoch of reionization. The evolution of the LAE luminosity function with redshift is a direct probe of the Ly-alpha transmission of the intergalactic medium (IGM), and therefore of the IGM neutral-hydrogen fraction. Measuring the Ly-alpha luminosity function (LF) of LAEs at redshift z = 7.7 therefore allows us to constrain the ionizing state of the Universe at this redshift. Methods. We observed three 7.5'x7.5' fields with the HAWK-I instrument at the VLT with a narrow band filter centred at 1.06 m and targeting LAEs at redshift z ~ 7.7. The fields were chosen for the availability of multiwavelength data. One field is a galaxy cluster, the Bullet Cluster, which allowed us to use gravitational amplification to probe luminosities that are fainter than in the field. The two other fields are subareas…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSolar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
