Probing the High-Redshift Universe with SPICA: Toward the Epoch of Reionization and Beyond
E. Egami, S. Gallerani, R. Schneider, A. Pallottini, L. Vallini, E., Sobacchi, A. Ferrara, S. Bianchi, M. Bocchio, S. Marassi, L. Armus, L., Spinoglio, A. W. Blain, M. Bradford, D. L. Clements, H. Dannerbauer, J. A., Fern\'andez-Ontiveros, E. Gonz\'alez-Alfonso, M. J. Griffin

TL;DR
This paper explores SPICA's potential to study the high-redshift universe, particularly hyper-luminous infrared galaxies and first-generation objects, using its far-infrared spectrometer SAFARI, which can access unexplored spectral ranges.
Contribution
It demonstrates the feasibility and scientific value of using SPICA's SAFARI instrument to probe the epoch of reionization and early galaxy formation at z=5-10.
Findings
SAFARI can obtain high-quality spectra of HyLIRGs at z=5-10
It can investigate star formation, AGN activity, and chemical enrichment in early galaxies
Potential to detect key cooling lines and signatures of Population III supernovae
Abstract
With the recent discovery of a dozen dusty star-forming galaxies and around 30 quasars at z>5 that are hyper-luminous in the infrared ( L, where is a lensing magnification factor), the possibility has opened up for SPICA, the proposed ESA M5 mid-/far-infrared mission, to extend its spectroscopic studies toward the epoch of reionization and beyond. In this paper, we examine the feasibility and scientific potential of such observations with SPICA's far-infrared spectrometer SAFARI, which will probe a spectral range (35-230 m) that will be unexplored by ALMA and JWST. Our simulations show that SAFARI is capable of delivering good-quality spectra for hyper-luminous infrared galaxies (HyLIRGs) at z=5-10, allowing us to sample spectral features in the rest-frame mid-infrared and to investigate a host of key scientific issues, such as the relative…
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