GRB 130606A as a Probe of the Intergalactic Medium and the Interstellar Medium in a Star-forming Galaxy in the First Gyr After the Big Bang
Ryan Chornock (1), Edo Berger (1), Derek B. Fox (2), Ragnhild Lunnan, (1), Maria R. Drout (1), Wen-fai Fong (1), Tanmoy Laskar (1), and Katherine, C. Roth (3) ((1) CfA,(2) Penn State, (3) Gemini Observatory)

TL;DR
This study uses high-quality spectroscopy of a high-redshift gamma-ray burst afterglow to investigate the state of the intergalactic and interstellar medium during the first billion years after the Big Bang, providing insights into cosmic reionization.
Contribution
It demonstrates the potential of GRB afterglows as probes of early universe conditions, with detailed measurements of the IGM's ionization state at z~5.91, comparable to quasar observations.
Findings
IGM is mostly ionized at z~5.91
Ly-alpha transmission drops sharply indicating reionization
Metallicity of host galaxy constrained between [Si/H]>-1.7 and [S/H]<-0.5
Abstract
We present high signal-to-noise ratio Gemini and MMT spectroscopy of the optical afterglow of the gamma-ray burst (GRB) 130606A at redshift z=5.913, discovered by Swift. This is the first high-redshift GRB afterglow to have spectra of comparable quality to those of z~6 quasars. The data exhibit a smooth continuum at near-infrared wavelengths that is sharply cut off blueward of 8410 Angs due to absorption from Ly-alpha at redshift z~5.91, with some flux transmitted through the Ly-alpha forest between 7000-7800 Angs. We use column densities inferred from metal absorption lines to constrain the metallicity of the host galaxy between a lower limit of [Si/H]>-1.7 and an upper limit of [S/H]<-0.5 set by the non-detection of S II absorption. We demonstrate consistency between the dramatic evolution in the transmission fraction of Ly-alpha seen in this spectrum over the redshift range z=4.9 to…
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