Mapping metals at high redshift with far-infrared lines
A. Pallottini, S. Gallerani, A. Ferrara, B. Yue, L. Vallini, R., Maiolino, C. Feruglio

TL;DR
This paper explores how far-infrared lines, especially [CII], can be used to study early metal enrichment in high-redshift galaxies and the intergalactic medium using simulations and ALMA data.
Contribution
It introduces a novel method combining simulations and observations to detect metal content and CMB fluctuations at redshift 6.
Findings
[CII] flux correlates with UV magnitude in agreement with observations.
Detection of [CII] from faint galaxies requires extensive observation time.
CMB fluctuations due to metals are very faint and challenging to detect.
Abstract
Cosmic metal enrichment is one of the key physical processes regulating galaxy formation and the evolution of the intergalactic medium (IGM). However, determining the metal content of the most distant galaxies has proven so far almost impossible; also, absorption line experiments at become increasingly difficult because of instrumental limitations and the paucity of background quasars. With the advent of ALMA, far-infrared emission lines provide a novel tool to study early metal enrichment. Among these, the [CII] line at 157.74 m is the most luminous line emitted by the interstellar medium of galaxies. It can also resonant scatter CMB photons inducing characteristic intensity fluctuations () near the peak of the CMB spectrum, thus allowing to probe the low-density IGM. We compute both [CII] galaxy emission and metal-induced CMB fluctuations at …
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