What do observations of the Lyman-alpha fraction tell us about reionization?
Jessie Taylor, Adam Lidz

TL;DR
This study models the evolution of the Lyman-alpha fraction during reionization, showing that current observations suggest a partially neutral universe at z ~ 7, but not necessarily highly neutral, due to sample variance effects.
Contribution
The paper introduces cosmological simulations of reionization to interpret Lyman-alpha fraction observations, accounting for spatial fluctuations and sample variance effects.
Findings
Current z=7 observations imply a neutral hydrogen fraction > 0.05.
Sample variance reduces the need for a highly neutral universe at z~7.
Lyman-alpha fraction measurements probe a universe partly, not fully, reionized.
Abstract
An appealing approach for studying the reionization history of the Universe is to measure the redshift evolution of the Lyman-alpha fraction, the percentage of Lyman-break selected galaxies that emit appreciably in the Ly-alpha line. This fraction is expected to fall-off towards high redshift as the intergalactic medium becomes significantly neutral, and the galaxies' Ly-alpha emission is progressively attenuated. Intriguingly, early measurements with this technique suggest a strong drop in the Ly-alpha fraction near z ~ 7. Previous work concluded that this requires a surprisingly neutral intergalactic medium -- with neutral hydrogen filling more than 50 % of the volume of the Universe -- at this redshift. We model the evolving Ly-alpha fraction using cosmological simulations of the reionization process. Before reionization completes, the simulated Ly-alpha fraction has large spatial…
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