Lyman Continuum leakage from massive leaky starbursts: A different class of emitters?
Namrata Roy, Timothy Heckman, Alaina Henry, John Chisholm, Sophia Flury, Claus Leitherer, Matthew J. Hayes, Anne Jaskot, Zhiyuan Ji, Daniel Schaerer, Bingjie Wang, Sanchayeeta Borthakur, Xinfeng Xu, G\"oran \"Ostlin

TL;DR
This study investigates low-redshift massive starburst galaxies with weak [SII] emission, revealing significant LyC leakage likely facilitated by feedback-driven winds, and highlights their distinct properties compared to typical LyC emitters.
Contribution
It identifies a new class of massive, dusty starburst galaxies with high LyC escape fractions, suggesting a different mechanism for photon escape involving feedback-driven winds.
Findings
Three out of five galaxies show LyC leakage.
Dust-corrected escape fractions range from 33% to 84%.
Absolute escape fractions are between 1% and 3%.
Abstract
The origin of Lyman Continuum (LyC) photons responsible for reionizing the universe remains a mystery, with the fraction of escaping LyC photons from galaxies at z 6 to 12 being highly uncertain. While direct detection of LyC photons from this epoch is hindered by absorption from the intergalactic medium, lower redshift analogs offer a promising avenue to study LyC leakage. We present Hubble Space Telescope Cosmic Origins Spectrograph (HST COS) observations of five low redshift (z 0.3) massive starburst galaxies, selected for their high stellar mass and weak [SII] nebular emission - an indirect tracer of LyC escape. Three of the five galaxies show LyC leakage, highlighting the reliability of weak [SII] as a tracer, especially in light of recent JWST discoveries of z 5 galaxies with similarly weak [SII] emission. The dust corrected LyC escape fractions, which represent…
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Taxonomy
TopicsParticle Accelerators and Free-Electron Lasers
