Rapid Decline of Lyman-alpha Emission Toward the Reionization Era
Vithal Tilvi (Texas A&M), Casey Papovich (Texas A&M), Steven L., Finkelstein (UT Austin), James Long (Texas A&M), Mimi Song (UT Austin), Mark, Dickinson (NOAO), Henry Ferguson (STScI), Anton M. Koekemoer (STScI), Mauro, Giavalisco (University of Massachusetts)

TL;DR
This study uses deep near-IR spectroscopy to measure the decline of Lyman-alpha emission in galaxies at z>7, providing evidence for ongoing reionization with increased neutral hydrogen in the IGM.
Contribution
It introduces a Bayesian formalism to constrain Lyman-alpha fraction evolution at high redshift, comparing smooth and patchy models with new spectroscopic data.
Findings
Lyman-alpha fraction drops by >3 times at z~8 compared to z~6
Data favor a patchy reionization scenario over smooth attenuation
IGM neutral hydrogen fraction >0.3 at z~8, indicating ongoing reionization
Abstract
The observed deficit of strongly Lyman-alpha emitting galaxies at z>6.5 is attributed to either increasing neutral hydrogen in the intergalactic medium (IGM) and/or to the evolving galaxy properties. To investigate this, we have performed very deep near-IR spectroscopy of z>7 galaxies using MOSFIRE on the Keck-I Telescope. We measure the Lyman-alpha fraction at z~8 (combined photometric redshift peak at z=7.7) using two methods. First, we derived NLy{\alpha}/Ntot directly using extensive simulations to correct for incompleteness. Second, we used a Bayesian formalism (introduced by Treu et al. 2012) that compares the z>7 galaxy spectra to models of the Lyman-alpha equivalent width (WLy{\alpha}) distribution at z~6. We explored two simple evolutionary scenarios: smooth evolution where Lyman-alpha is attenuated in all galaxies by a constant factor (perhaps owing to processes from galaxy…
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