Searching for the connection between ionizing-photon escape and the surface density of star formation at z~3
Anthony J. Pahl, Alice Shapley, Charles C. Steidel, Naveen A. Reddy,, Yuguang Chen

TL;DR
This study investigates the relationship between ionizing photon escape fraction and star-formation rate surface density at z~3, finding no significant correlation in the analyzed sample and emphasizing the need for larger, more representative samples for future research.
Contribution
It provides the first high-redshift analysis of the $f_{esc}$ and $ m \Sigma_{SFR}$ connection using deep UV spectra and HST imaging, and determines the sample size needed for robust future studies.
Findings
No significant difference in $f_{esc}$ between high and low $ m \Sigma_{SFR}$ bins.
The existing sample is insufficient to establish a correlation between $f_{esc}$ and galaxy properties.
Optimal sample sizes for future observations are >= 58 or >= 90 objects depending on selection criteria.
Abstract
The connection between the escape fraction of ionizing photons () and star-formation rate surface density () is a key input for reionization models, but remains untested at high redshift. We analyse 35 z~3 galaxies from the Keck Lyman Continuum Survey (KLCS) covered by deep, rest far-UV spectra of the Lyman continuum (LyC) and high-resolution HST V imaging, enabling estimates of both and rest-UV sizes. Using S\'ersic profile fits to HST images and spectral-energy distribution fits to multi-band photometry, we measure effective sizes and star-formation rates for the galaxies in our sample, and separate the sample into two bins of . Based on composite spectra, we estimate <> for both subsamples, finding no significant difference in <> between the two. To test the…
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