GRB 140515A at z=6.33: Constraints on the End of Reionization From a Gamma-ray Burst in a Low Hydrogen Column Density Environment
R. Chornock (1), E. Berger (1), D. B. Fox (2), W. Fong (1), T. Laskar, (1), and K. C. Roth (3), ((1) Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics,, (2) Penn State, (3) Gemini)

TL;DR
This study analyzes the spectrum of a high-redshift gamma-ray burst to constrain the state of the intergalactic medium during reionization, suggesting a mostly ionized universe at z~6.33.
Contribution
It provides new constraints on the neutral hydrogen fraction at z~6.33 using GRB afterglow spectroscopy and models the IGM and host galaxy absorption.
Findings
IGM neutral fraction x_HI<0.21 at 2-sigma level
No significant host galaxy absorption lines detected
Low host galaxy hydrogen column density observed
Abstract
We present the discovery and subsequent spectroscopy with Gemini-North of the optical afterglow of the Swift gamma-ray burst (GRB) 140515A. The spectrum exhibits a well-detected continuum at wavelengths longer than 8915 Angs with a steep decrement to zero flux blueward of 8910 Angs due to Ly-alpha absorption at redshift z~6.33. Some transmission through the Lyman-alpha forest is present at 5.2<z<5.733, but none is detected at higher redshift, consistent with previous measurements from quasars and GRB 130606A. We model the red damping wing of Lyman-alpha in three ways that provide equally good fits to the data: (a) a single host galaxy absorber at z=6.327 with log(N_HI)=18.62+/-0.08; (b) pure intergalactic medium (IGM) absorption from z=6.0 to z=6.328 with a constant neutral hydrogen fraction of x_HI=0.056+0.011-0.027; and (c) a hybrid model with a host absorber located within an ionized…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astro and Planetary Science
