Reconstructing the intergalactic UV background with QSO absorption lines
Cora Fechner

TL;DR
This paper introduces a method to observationally constrain the spectral energy distribution of the intergalactic UV background using metal absorption lines, revealing its characteristics and implications for intergalactic medium properties.
Contribution
It presents a novel approach to constrain the UV background spectrum through photoionization modeling of metal absorption systems, accounting for uncertainties and reprocessing effects.
Findings
The UV background spectrum can be constrained but not uniquely reconstructed.
Physical parameters depend strongly on the assumed ionizing spectrum.
Recent models with HeII reprocessing fit the observed data well.
Abstract
We present a new approach to constrain the spectral energy distribution of the intergalactic UV background observationally by studying metal absorption systems. We study single-component metal line systems exhibiting various well-measured species. Among the observed transitions at least two ratios of ionization stages from the same element are required, e.g. CIII/CIV and SiIII/SiIV. For each system photoionization models are constructed varying the spectrum of the ionizing radiation. The spectral energy distribution can then be constrained by comparing the models with the observed column density ratios. Extensive tests with artificial absorbers show that the spectrum of the ionizing radiation cannot be reconstructed unambiguously, but it is possible to constrain the main characteristics of the spectrum. Furthermore, the resulting physical parameters of the absorber, such as ionization…
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