Lyman-alpha Emission from a Luminous z=8.68 Galaxy: Implications for Galaxies as Tracers of Cosmic Reionization
Adi Zitrin, Ivo Labbe, Sirio Belli, Rychard Bouwens, Richard S. Ellis,, Guido Roberts-Borsani, Daniel P. Stark, Pascal A. Oesch, Renske Smit

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of Lyman-alpha emission from a luminous galaxy at redshift 8.68, providing insights into cosmic reionization and the role of bright galaxies in early universe ionization.
Contribution
It presents the first robust spectroscopic confirmation of Lyman-alpha emission from a galaxy at z=8.68, highlighting the significance of luminous sources in reionization studies.
Findings
Lyman-alpha emission detected at z=8.68 with high significance.
Bright galaxy shows potential for creating early ionized bubbles.
Supports the idea that luminous galaxies contribute to reionization.
Abstract
We report the discovery of Lyman-alpha emission (Ly) in the bright galaxy EGSY-2008532660 (hereafter EGSY8p7) using the MOSFIRE spectrograph at the Keck Observatory. First reported by Roberts-Borsani et al. (2015), it was selected for spectroscopic observations because of its photometric redshift (), apparent brightness (H) and red Spitzer/IRAC [3.6]-[4.5] color indicative of contamination by strong oxygen emission in the [4.5] band. With a total integration of 4.3 hours, our data reveal an emission line at 11776 {\AA} which we argue is likely Ly at a redshift , in good agreement with the photometric estimate. The line was detected independently on two nights using different slit orientations and its detection significance is . An overlapping skyline…
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