The Faint-End Slope of the Redshift 5.7 Lyman Alpha Luminosity Function
Alaina Henry (1), Crystal Martin (1), Alan Dressler (2), Marcin, Sawicki (3), Patrick McCarthy (2) ((1) UCSB, (2) OCIW, (3) Saint Mary's)

TL;DR
This study refines the luminosity function of faint Lyman Alpha emitters at redshift 5.7, revealing a steep faint-end slope and suggesting many ultra-faint galaxies remain undetected, impacting our understanding of early galaxy formation.
Contribution
It provides the most accurate constraints to date on the redshift 5.7 Lyman Alpha luminosity function, incorporating new spectroscopic data and analyzing the effects of equivalent width distributions.
Findings
Confirmed six Lyman Alpha emitters with asymmetric line profiles.
Estimated Schechter function parameters for the luminosity function.
Faint galaxies likely contribute significantly to reionization and are mostly undetectable in current surveys.
Abstract
Using new Keck DEIMOS spectroscopy, we examine the origin of the steep number counts of ultra-faint emission-line galaxies recently reported by Dressler et al. (2011). We confirm six Lyman Alpha emitters (LAEs), three of which have significant asymmetric line profiles with prominent wings extending 300-400 km/s redward of the peak emission. With these six LAEs, we revise our previous estimate of the number of faint LAEs in the Dressler et al. survey. Combining these data with the density of bright LAEs in the Cosmic Origins Survey and Subaru Deep Field provides the best constraints to date on the redshift 5.7 LAE luminosity function (LF). Schechter function parameters, phi^* = 4.5 x 10^{-4} Mpc^{-3}, L^* = 9.1 x 10^{42} erg s^{-1}, and alpha= -1.70, are estimated using a maximum likelihood technique with a model for slit losses. To place this result in the context of the UV-selected…
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