EMPRESS. VII. Ionizing Spectrum Shapes of Extremely Metal-Poor Galaxies: Uncovering the Origins of Strong HeII and the Impact on Cosmic Reionization
Hiroya Umeda, Masami Ouchi, Kimihiko Nakajima, Yuki Isobe, Shohei, Aoyama, Yuichi Harikane, Yoshiaki Ono, and Akinori Matsumoto

TL;DR
This study derives the ionizing spectra of extremely metal-poor galaxies to understand their role in cosmic reionization, revealing diverse spectrum shapes explained by stellar and non-thermal sources, with implications for early universe ionization.
Contribution
The paper provides the first detailed modeling of ionizing spectra in local EMPGs using MCMC, demonstrating diversity in spectrum shapes and their origins from stellar age and non-thermal sources.
Findings
Ionizing spectra can be explained by stellar and ultra-luminous X-ray sources.
Diversity in spectrum shapes correlates with stellar age differences.
High-energy photons from non-stellar sources are weak contributors to reionization.
Abstract
Strong high-ionization lines such as HeII of young galaxies are puzzling at high and low redshift. Although recent studies suggest the existence of non-thermal sources, whether their ionizing spectra can consistently explain multiple major emission lines remains a question. Here we derive the general shapes of the ionizing spectra for three local extremely metal-poor galaxies (EMPGs) that show strong HeII4686. We parameterize the ionizing spectra composed of a blackbody and power-law radiation mimicking various stellar and non-thermal sources. We use photoionization models for nebulae, and determine seven parameters of the ionizing spectra and nebulae by Markov Chain Monte Carlo methods, carefully avoiding systematics of abundance ratios. We obtain the general shapes of ionizing spectra explaining major emission lines within observational errors with smooth…
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