High star cluster formation efficiency in the strongly lensed Sunburst Lyman-continuum galaxy at z=2.37
E. Vanzella, M. Castellano, P. Bergamini, M. Meneghetti, A. Zanella,, F. Calura, G. B. Caminha, P. Rosati, G. Cupani, U. Mestric, G. Brammer, P., Tozzi, A. Mercurio, C. Grillo, E. Sani, S. Cristiani, M. Nonino, E. Merlin,, G.V. Pignataro

TL;DR
This study examines a strongly lensed galaxy at z=2.37, revealing a high star cluster formation efficiency and significant ionizing radiation escape, providing insights into reionization-era galaxy properties.
Contribution
It presents detailed analysis of a lensed galaxy's star clusters, quantifies the cluster formation efficiency, and links these to ionizing photon escape relevant for reionization.
Findings
A young massive star cluster contributes significantly to LyC emission.
The galaxy exhibits a high cluster formation efficiency (~30%).
Escape fraction of ionizing radiation from the galaxy is >6-12%, higher from the star cluster.
Abstract
We investigate the strongly lensed (\mu x10-100) Lyman continuum (LyC) galaxy, dubbed Sunburst, at z=2.37, taking advantage of a new accurate model of the lens. A characterization of the intrinsic (delensed) properties of the galaxy yields a size of ~3 sq.kpc, a luminosity Muv=-20.3,and a stellar mass M~10^9 Msun;16% of the ultraviolet light is located in a 3 Myr old gravitationally-bound young massive star cluster (YMC) with an effective radius of Re~8 pc and a dynamical mass of ~10^7 Msun (similar to the stellar mass), from which LyC radiation is detected (\lambda < 912A). The inferred outflowing gas velocity (>300 km/s) exceeds the escape velocity of the star cluster. The resulting escape fraction of the ionizing radiation emerging from the Sunburst galaxy is >6-12%, whilst it is >46-93% if inferred from the YMC. 12 additional likely star clusters with 3<Re<20 pc are identified in…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
