The fraction of ionizing radiation from massive stars that escapes to the intergalactic medium
N. R. Tanvir, J. P. U. Fynbo, A. de Ugarte Postigo, J. Japelj, K., Wiersema, D. Malesani, D. A. Perley, A. J. Levan, J. Selsing, S. B. Cenko, D., A. Kann, B. Milvang-Jensen, E. Berger, Z. Cano, R. Chornock, S. Covino, A., Cucchiara, V. D'Elia, P. Goldoni, A. Gomboc, K. E. Heintz

TL;DR
This study uses gamma-ray burst afterglow spectroscopy to estimate the escape fraction of ionizing radiation from galaxies, finding it to be very low at redshifts below 5, which challenges the idea that such galaxies drove cosmic reionization.
Contribution
It provides the first large sample-based estimate of the average escape fraction of ionizing radiation from high-redshift galaxies using GRB data, independent of galaxy properties.
Findings
Average escape fraction at z<5 is ~0.005.
No significant correlation between HI column density and galaxy UV luminosity.
Results suggest low contribution of stars in dwarf galaxies to cosmic reionization.
Abstract
The part played by stars in the ionization of the intergalactic medium remains an open question. A key issue is the proportion of the stellar ionizing radiation that escapes the galaxies in which it is produced. Spectroscopy of gamma-ray burst afterglows can be used to determine the neutral hydrogen column-density in their host galaxies and hence the opacity to extreme ultra-violet radiation along the lines-of-sight to the bursts. Thus, making the reasonable assumption that long-duration GRB locations are representative of the sites of massive stars that dominate EUV production, one can calculate an average escape fraction of ionizing radiation in a way that is independent of galaxy size, luminosity or underlying spectrum. Here we present a sample of NH measures for 138 GRBs in the range 1.6<z<6.7 and use it to establish an average escape fraction at the Lyman limit of <fesc>~0.005,…
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