The Role of Galaxies and AGN in Reionising the IGM - I: Keck Spectroscopy of 5 < z < 7 Galaxies in the QSO Field J1148+5251
Koki Kakiichi, Richard S. Ellis, Nicolas Laporte, Adi Zitrin,, Anna-Christina Eilers, Emma Ryan-Weber, Romain A. Meyer, Brant Robertson,, Daniel P. Stark, Sarah E. I. Bosman

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new statistical method to assess the influence of galaxies and AGN on the IGM during reionisation by correlating galaxy positions with Lyman alpha forest fluctuations, applying it to high-redshift data.
Contribution
It presents a novel approach combining galaxy spectroscopy and Lyman alpha forest analysis to constrain the escape fraction of ionising photons at high redshift.
Findings
Estimated escape fraction of Lyman continuum photons is at least 8% at z~6.
Detected a faint AGN at z=5.701 and evidence of proximity effects around high-redshift galaxies.
Indications that faint galaxies primarily drove reionisation, with luminous galaxies and AGN also contributing.
Abstract
We introduce a new method for determining the influence of galaxies and active galactic nuclei (AGN) on the physical state of the intergalactic medium (IGM) at high redshift and illustrate its potential via a first application to the field of the QSO J1148+5251. By correlating the spatial positions of spectroscopically-confirmed Lyman break galaxies (LBGs) with fluctuations in the Lyman alpha forest seen in the high signal-to-noise spectrum of a background QSO, we provide a statistical measure of the typical escape fraction of Lyman continuum photons close to the end of cosmic reionisation. Here we use Keck DEIMOS spectroscopy to locate 7 colour-selected LBGs in the redshift range and confirm a faint AGN. We then examine the spatial correlation between this sample and Ly/Ly transmission fluctuations in a Keck ESI spectrum of…
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