Project Lyman: Quantifying 11 Gyrs of Metagalactic Ionizing Background Evolution
Stephan R. McCandliss, B-G Andersson, Nils Bergvall, Luciana Bianchi,, Carrie Bridge, Milan Bogosavljevic, Seth H. Cohen, Jean-Michel Deharveng, W., Van Dyke Dixon, Harry Ferguson, Peter Friedman, Matthew Hayes, J. Christopher, Howk, Akio Inoue, Ikuru Iwata

TL;DR
This paper investigates the evolution of the metagalactic ionizing background over the past 11 billion years, focusing on the escape fraction of ionizing photons from star-forming galaxies and its impact on cosmic reionization.
Contribution
It provides new estimates of ionizing flux from star-forming galaxies as a function of redshift and escape fraction, enhancing understanding of reionization sources.
Findings
At z=1, galaxies with 1% escape fraction emit a flux of 10^{-19} erg/cm^2/s/Å.
Quantifies the evolution of LyC escape fraction over 11 billion years.
Offers insights into the role of star-forming galaxies in cosmic reionization.
Abstract
The timing and duration of the reionization epoch is crucial to the emergence and evolution of structure in the universe. The relative roles that star-forming galaxies, active galactic nuclei and quasars play in contributing to the metagalactic ionizing background across cosmic time remains uncertain. Deep quasar counts provide insights into their role, but the potentially crucial contribution from star-formation is highly uncertain due to our poor understanding of the processes that allow ionizing radiation to escape into the intergalactic medium (IGM). The fraction of ionizing photons that escape from star-forming galaxies is a fundamental free parameter used in models to "fine-tune" the timing and duration of the reionization epoch that occurred somewhere between 13.4 and 12.7 Gyrs ago (redshifts between 12 > z > 6). However, direct observation of Lyman continuum (LyC) photons…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena
