Escape of Lyman-alpha and continuum photons from star-forming galaxies
Hidenobu Yajima (1), Yuexing Li (2), Qirong Zhu (2), Tom Abel (3),, Caryl Gronwall (2), Robin Ciardullo (2) ((1) University of Edinburgh, (2), Pennsylvania State University, (3) Stanford University)

TL;DR
This study uses simulations to analyze how Lyman-alpha, UV, and ionizing photons escape from high-redshift galaxies, revealing complex dependencies on galaxy properties and implications for cosmic reionization.
Contribution
It combines cosmological hydrodynamic simulations with radiative transfer to quantify photon escape fractions and their evolution, providing new insights into galaxy contribution to reionization.
Findings
fesc(Lya) and fesc(UV) evolve with redshift
fesc(Ion) remains roughly constant at ~0.2 from z~0 to 10
LAEs contribute to reionization but are not solely responsible at z > 6
Abstract
A large number of high-redshift galaxies have been discovered via their narrow-band Lya line or broad-band continuum colors in recent years. The nature of the escaping process of photons from these early galaxies is crucial to understanding galaxy evolution and the cosmic reionization. Here, we investigate the escape of Lya, non-ionizing UV-continuum (l = 1300 - 1600 angstrom in rest frame), and ionizing photons (l < 912 angstrom) from galaxies by combining a cosmological hydrodynamic simulation with three-dimensional multi-wavelength radiative transfer calculations. The galaxies are simulated in a box of 5^3 h^-3 Mpc^3 with high resolutions using the Aquila initial condition which reproduces a Milky Way-like galaxy at redshift z=0. We find that the escape fraction (fesc) of these different photons shows a complex dependence on redshift and galaxy properties: fesc(Lya) and fesc(UV)…
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