Do galaxies that leak ionizing photons have extreme outflows?
J. Chisholm, I. Orlitov\'a, D. Schaerer, A. Verhamme, G. Worseck, Y., I. Izotov, T. X. Thuan, and N. G. Guseva

TL;DR
This study investigates whether galaxies that leak ionizing photons exhibit extreme galactic outflows by comparing their outflow properties to a control sample, finding that leakers have low equivalent widths and specific velocity profile characteristics.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed comparison of outflow properties between confirmed LyC leakers and non-leaking galaxies, highlighting the role of metallicity and density in photon escape.
Findings
LyC leakers have low Si II and Si III equivalent widths.
Leakers' absorption line profiles show closer central and maximum velocities.
Outflow velocities are not significantly different from control galaxies.
Abstract
To reionize the early universe, high-energy photons must escape the galaxies that produce them. It has been suggested that stellar feedback drives galactic outflows out of star-forming regions, creating low density channels through which ionizing photons escape into the inter-galactic medium. We compare the galactic outflow properties of confirmed Lyman continuum (LyC) leaking galaxies to a control sample of nearby star-forming galaxies to explore whether the outflows from leakers are extreme as compared to the control sample. We use data from the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph on the Hubble Space Telescope to measure the equivalent widths and velocities of Si II and Si III absorption lines, tracing neutral and ionized galactic outflows. We find that the Si II and Si III equivalent widths of the LyC leakers reside on the low-end of the trend established by the control sample. The leakers'…
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