Constraints on the production and escape of ionizing radiation from the emission-line spectra of metal-poor star-forming galaxies
Ad\`ele Plat, Stephane Charlot, Gustavo Bruzual, Anna Feltre, Alba, Vidal-Garc\'ia, Christophe Morisset, Jacopo Chevallard, Helge Todt

TL;DR
This study investigates the ionizing radiation production and escape in metal-poor star-forming galaxies, finding that additional sources like AGN or shocks are needed to explain observed high-ionization features and LyC escape.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive modeling approach combining various ionization sources and compares with observations, highlighting the need for harder radiation sources in extreme metal-poor galaxies.
Findings
Standard stellar models cannot produce enough high-energy photons.
AGN or radiative shocks are necessary to match observations.
No simple diagnostic can distinguish ionizing sources without detailed spectral fitting.
Abstract
We explore the production and escape of ionizing photons in young galaxies by investigating the ultraviolet and optical emission-line properties of models of ionization-bounded and density-bounded HII regions, active-galactic-nucleus (AGN) narrow-line regions and radiative shocks computed all using the same physically-consistent description of element abundances and depletion on to dust grains down to very low metallicities. We compare these models with a reference sample of metal-poor star-forming galaxies and Lyman-continuum (LyC) leakers at various redshifts, which allows the simultaneous exploration of more spectral diagnostics than typically available at once for individual subsamples. We confirm that current single- and binary-star population synthesis models do not produce hard-enough radiation to account for the high-ionization emission of the most metal-poor galaxies.…
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