Confirmation of a Steep Luminosity Function for Lyman-alpha Emitters at z = 5.7: A Major Component of Reionization
Alan Dressler, Alaina Henry, Crystal L. Martin, Marcin Sawicki,, Patrick McCarthy, and Edward Villaneuva

TL;DR
This study robustly measures the steep faint-end slope of the Lyman-alpha emitter luminosity function at z=5.7, indicating these galaxies significantly contributed to cosmic reionization.
Contribution
First direct measurement of the faint-end slope of the LAE luminosity function at z=5.7, confirming a steep slope around -2.0 to -2.35, and linking LAEs to reionization.
Findings
Faint LAEs observed down to fluxes of 2.0 x 10^{-17} erg s^{-1} cm^{-2}.
Faint-end slope of the luminosity function constrained between -2.35 and -1.95.
LAEs could provide over 20% of the ionizing flux at z=5.7.
Abstract
We report the first direct and robust measurement of the faint-end slope of the Lyman-alpha emitter (LAE) luminosity function at z = 5.7. Candidate LAEs from a low-spectral-resolution blind search with IMACS on Magellan-Baade were targeted at higher resolution to distinguish high redshift LAEs from foreground galaxies. All but 2 of our 42 single-emission-line systems have flux F ergs s cm, making these the faintest emission-lines observed for a z = 5.7 sample with known completeness, an essential property for determining the faint end slope of the LAE luminosity function. We find 13 LAEs as compared to 29 foreground galaxies, in very good agreement with the modeled foreground counts predicted in Dressler et al. (2011a) that had been used to estimate a faint-end slope of = -2.0 for the LAE luminosity function. A 32% LAE fraction,…
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