MOSEL survey: Unwrapping the Epoch of Reionization through mimic galaxies at Cosmic Noon
Ravi Jaiswar, Anshu Gupta, Elisabete da Cunha, Cathryn M. Trott,, Anishya Harshan, Andrew Battisti, Ben Forrest

TL;DR
This study compares low-redshift extreme emission line galaxies with high-redshift galaxies observed by JWST to understand their properties and better infer the nature of early galaxies during the Epoch of Reionization.
Contribution
It demonstrates that low-redshift EELGs are good analogues for high-redshift EoR galaxies, aiding in the study of their spectral properties and reionization role.
Findings
EELGs have similar UV slopes and star formation rates to high-redshift galaxies.
EELGs are less massive and have lower dust extinction than typical control galaxies.
Ionizing photon production efficiencies are consistent across samples.
Abstract
The nature of the first galaxies that reionized the universe during the Epoch of Reionization (EoR) remains unclear. Attempts to directly determine spectral properties of these early galaxies are affected by both limited photometric constraints across the spectrum and by the opacity of the intergalactic medium (IGM) to the Lyman Continuum (LyC) at high redshift. We approach this by analysing properties of analogous extreme emission line galaxies (EELGs, [OIII]+Hbeta EW Angstrom) at from the ZFOURGE survey using the Multi-wavelength Analysis of Galaxy Physical Properties (MAGPHYS) SED fitting code. We compare these to galaxies at observed with the James Webb Space Telesope (JWST) with self-consistent spectral energy distribution fitting methodology. This work focuses on the comparison of their UV slopes (), ionizing photon production efficiencies…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDark Matter and Cosmic Phenomena · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Scientific Research and Discoveries
