Limits on the LyC signal from z~3 sources with secure redshift and HST coverage in the E-CDFS field
L. Guaita, L. Pentericci, A. Grazian, E. Vanzella, M. Nonino, M., Giavalisco, G. Zamorani, A. Bongiorno, P. Cassata, M. Castellano, B. Garilli,, E. Gawiser, V. Le Brun, O. Le Fevre, B. C. Lemaux, D. Maccagni, E. Merlin, P., Santini, L. A. M. Tasca, R. Thomas, E. Zucca

TL;DR
This study investigates the escape of ionizing Lyman continuum radiation from z~3 star-forming galaxies and AGN using HST data, setting upper limits on escape fractions and detecting one AGN with significant LyC emission.
Contribution
The paper provides the first stringent upper limits on LyC escape fractions for a large, spectroscopically confirmed sample of z~3 galaxies and AGN, using high-resolution HST imaging.
Findings
No individual SFGs show detectable LyC emission.
An upper limit of 12% (2 sigma) on the LyC escape fraction for SFGs.
One AGN at z=3.46 shows a significant LyC detection with 72% escape fraction.
Abstract
Aim: We aim to measure the LyC signal from a sample of sources in the Chandra deep field south. We collect star-forming galaxies (SFGs) and active galactic nuclei (AGN) with accurate spectroscopic redshifts, for which Hubble Space Telescope (HST) coverage and multi-wavelength photometry are available. Method: We selected a sample of about 200 sources at z~3. Taking advantage of HST resolution, we applied a careful cleaning procedure and rejected sources showing nearby clumps with different colours, which could be lower-z interlopers. Our clean sample consisted of 86 SFGs (including 19 narrow-band selected Lya emitters) and 8 AGN (including 6 detected in X-rays). We measured the LyC flux from aperture photometry in four narrow-band filters covering wavelengths below a 912 A rest frame (3.11<z<3.53). We estimated the ratio between ionizing (LyC flux) and 1400 A non-ionizing emissions for…
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