A new technique for finding galaxies leaking Lyman-continuum radiation: [SII]-deficiency
Bingjie Wang, Timothy M. Heckman, Claus Leitherer, Rachel Alexandroff,, Sanchayeeta Borthakur, Roderik A. Overzier

TL;DR
This study introduces a novel method using [SII]-deficiency to identify galaxies leaking Lyman-continuum radiation, validated through Hubble observations, aiding understanding of cosmic reionization sources.
Contribution
The paper presents a new technique based on [SII]-line weakness to find leaky galaxies, validated with Hubble data, expanding tools for studying reionization.
Findings
Detected Lyman-continuum leakage in 2 out of 3 [SII]-weak galaxies
[SII]-deficiency correlates with Lyman continuum escape
Identified properties of leaky galaxies at low redshift
Abstract
The source responsible for the reionization of the Universe is believed to be the population of star-forming galaxies at to 12. The biggest uncertainty concerns the fraction of Lyman-continuum photons that actually escape from the galaxies. In recent years, several relatively small samples of "leaky" galaxies have been uncovered, and clues have begun to emerge as to both the indirect signposts of leakiness and of the conditions/processes that enable the escape of ionizing radiation. In this paper we present the results of a pilot program aimed to test a new technique for finding leaky galaxies---using the weakness of the [SII] nebular emission-lines relative to typical star-forming galaxies as evidence that the interstellar medium is optically-thin to the Lyman continuum. We use the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph on the Hubble Space Telescope to detect significant emerging flux…
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