A spectroscopic search for AGN activity in the reionization era
Nicolas Laporte, Kimihiko Nakajima, Richard S. Ellis, Adi Zitrin,, Daniel P. Stark, Ramesh Mainali, G. Roberts-Borsani

TL;DR
This study investigates the presence of active galactic nuclei in early galaxies during reionization by analyzing spectroscopic data, finding evidence of non-thermal sources and ionized bubbles, with implications for understanding galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It provides new spectroscopic evidence of AGN activity in high-redshift galaxies using VLT and Keck observations, highlighting the role of non-thermal radiation in early ionized bubbles.
Findings
Detection of nebular He II and NV emission indicating non-thermal sources.
Lyα emission observed in some galaxies, suggesting ionized bubbles.
Evidence linking intense [O III] emission with early ionized regions.
Abstract
The ubiquity of Lyman alpha (Ly) emission in a sample of four bright [O III]-strong star-forming galaxies with redshifts above 7 has led to the suggestion that such luminous sources represent a distinct population compared to their fainter, more numerous, counterparts. The presence of Ly emission within the reionization era could indicate that these sources created early ionized bubbles due to their unusually strong radiation, possibly due to the presence of active galactic nuclei. To test this hypothesis we have secured long integration spectra with XSHOOTER on the VLT for three 7 sources selected to have similar luminosities and prominent excess fluxes in the IRAC 3.6 or 4.5m band, usually attributed to strong [O III] emission. We secured additional spectroscopy for one of these galaxies at =7.15 using MOSFIRE at the Keck telescope. For this, the most…
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