@gpkulkarni

New Methods for Identifying Lyman Continuum Leakers and Reionization-Epoch Analogues

, , , , , , , , , and . (2020)cite arxiv:2005.01734Comment: 16 pages, 11 figures, submitted to MNRAS.

Abstract

Identifying low-redshift galaxies that emit Lyman Continuum radiation (LyC leakers) is one of the primary, indirect methods of studying galaxy formation in the epoch of reionization. However, not only has it proved challenging to identify such systems, but it also remains uncertain whether the low-redshift LyC leakers are true änalogues" of the sources that reionized the Universe. Here, we use high-resolution cosmological radiation hydrodynamics simulations to examine whether simulated galaxies in the epoch of reionization share similar emission-line properties to observed LyC leakers at $z\sim3$ and $z\sim0$. We find that the simulated galaxies with high LyC escape fractions ($f_esc$) often exhibit high O32 and populate the same regions of the R23-O32 plane as $z\sim3$ LyC leakers. However, we show that viewing angle, metallicity, and ionisation parameter can all impact where a galaxy resides on the O32-$f_esc$ plane. Based on emission line diagnostics and how they correlate with $f_esc$, lower-metallicity LyC leakers at $z\sim3$ appear to be good analogues of reionization-era galaxies. In contrast, we find that identifying low-redshift galaxies based on SII deficiencies does not seem to produce true analogues. We use our simulated galaxies to develop multiple new diagnostics to identify LyC leakers using IR and nebular emission lines. We show that our model using only CII$_158m$ and OIII$_88\mu m$ can identify potential leakers from non-leakers from the local Dwarf Galaxy Survey. Finally, we apply this diagnostic to known high-redshift galaxies and find that MACS1149\_JD1 at $z=9.1$ is the most likely galaxy to be actively contributing to the reionization of the Universe.

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New Methods for Identifying Lyman Continuum Leakers and Reionization-Epoch Analogues

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