Direct Detection of Lyman Continuum Escape from Local Starburst Galaxies with the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph
Claus Leitherer (STScI, Baltimore), Svea Hernandez (Radboud Univ., Nijmegen), Janice C. Lee (STScI, Baltimore), M. S. Oey (Univ. of Michigan)

TL;DR
This study reports the detection of Lyman continuum radiation in three nearby starburst galaxies using Hubble's Cosmic Origins Spectrograph, providing insights into their escape fractions and star-formation properties.
Contribution
First detection of Lyman continuum escape from local starburst galaxies with a novel background subtraction method improving measurement accuracy.
Findings
Detected Lyman continuum in all three galaxies.
Measured escape fractions: 4.5%, 2.5%, and <7.1%.
Developed a new background subtraction pipeline.
Abstract
We report on the detection of Lyman continuum radiation in two nearby starburst galaxies. Tol 0440-381, Tol 1247-232 and Mrk 54 were observed with the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph onboard the Hubble Space Telescopes. The three galaxies have radial velocities of ~13,000 km/s, permitting a ~35 A window on the restframe Lyman continuum shortward of the Milky Way Lyman edge at 912 A. The chosen instrument configuration using the G140L grating covers the spectral range from 912 to 2,000 {\AA}. We developed a dedicated background subtraction method to account for temporal and spatial background variations of the detector, which is crucial at the low flux levels around 912 A. This modified pipeline allowed us to significantly improve the statistical and systematic detector noise and will be made available to the community. We detect Lyman continuum in all three galaxies. However, we…
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