No correlation of the Lyman continuum escape fraction with spectral hardness
R. Marques-Chaves, D. Schaerer, R. O. Amor\'in, H. Atek, S. Borthakur,, J. Chisholm, V. Fern\'andez, S. R. Flury, M. Giavalisco, A. Grazian, M. J., Hayes, T. M. Heckman, A. Henry, Y. I. Izotov, A. E. Jaskot, Z. Ji, S. R., McCandliss, M. S. Oey, G. \"Ostlin, S. Ravindranath

TL;DR
This study finds no correlation between the hardness of ionizing radiation and the escape fraction of Lyman continuum photons in star-forming galaxies, suggesting spectral hardness is not a predictor of LyC leakage.
Contribution
It provides empirical evidence that the spectral hardness of ionizing radiation does not predict LyC escape fraction in low-redshift star-forming galaxies.
Findings
HeII/Hβ intensity is driven by metallicity, not LyC escape.
No correlation between Q_{He+}/Q_{H} and LyC escape fraction.
Strong LyC emitters do not have harder spectra than nonleakers.
Abstract
The properties that govern the production and escape of hydrogen ionizing photons (Lyman continuum, LyC; with energies >13.6 eV) in star-forming galaxies are still poorly understood, but they are key to identifying and characterizing the sources that reionized the Universe. Here we empirically explore the relationship between the hardness of ionizing radiation and the LyC leakage in a large sample of low- star-forming galaxies from the recent Hubble Space Telescope Low- Lyman Continuum Survey. Using Sloan Digital Sky Survey stacks and deep XShooter observations, we investigate the hardness of the ionizing spectra () between 54.4 eV (He) and 13.6 eV (H) from the optical recombination lines HeII 4686A and H 4861A for galaxies with LyC escape fractions spanning a wide range, . We find that the observed…
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