Constraints on the Lyman continuum escape fraction for faint star forming galaxies
J. Japelj, E. Vanzella, F. Fontanot, S. Cristiani, G. B. Caminha, P., Tozzi, I. Balestra, P. Rosati, M. Meneghetti

TL;DR
This study investigates the escape fraction of ionizing radiation from faint star-forming galaxies at high redshift, providing upper limits and emphasizing the importance of constraining this fraction for understanding cosmic reionization.
Contribution
It combines deep UV and spectroscopic observations to set upper limits on the escape fraction of faint galaxies and models its dependence on luminosity.
Findings
No significant LyC emission detected in the sample.
Upper limits on escape fraction are <0.07, 0.2, 0.6 at different luminosities.
Understanding luminosity dependence requires constraining escape fraction down to M_UV ~ -18 mag.
Abstract
Star forming galaxies have long been considered the dominant sources of the cosmic ultraviolet background radiation at early epochs. However, observing and characterizing the galaxy population with significant ionizing emission has proven to be challenging. In particular, the fraction of ionizing radiation that escapes the local environment to the intergalactic medium is poorly known. We investigate the relation between the escape fraction and galaxy luminosity. We combine the deep ultraviolet observations of Hubble Ultra Deep Field (UVUDF) with the deep Multi Unit Spectroscopic Explorer (MUSE) observations of the same field, collecting a sample of 165 faint star forming galaxies in the redshift range with deep rest-frame observations of the Lyman continuum. In our sample, we do not find any galaxy with significant emission of LyC radiation. We bin the galaxies in various…
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