117 research outputs found

    He II optical depth and UV escape fraction of galaxies

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    We study the effect of H I ionizing photons escaping from high-redshift (high-z) galaxies have on the He II ionizing ultraviolet background (UVB) radiation. While these photons do not directly interact with He II ions, we show that they play an important role, through radiative transport, in modifying the shape of He II ionizing part of UVB spectrum. Within the observed range of UV escape from galaxies, we show that the rapid increase in He II Lyman alpha effective optical depth at z~2.7 can naturally be explained by radiative transport effects. Therefore, the relationship between a well measured He II Lyman alpha effective optical depth and the redshift in the post-He II reionization era can be used to place additional constraints on the redshift evolution of UV escape from high-z galaxies. Our study also suggests that the escape fraction of H I ionizing photons from galaxies has an important role in the fluctuations of the He II ionizing UVB.Comment: Published in MNRAS Letters, replacement of a figure and minor text changes corresponding to published versio

    ELT requirements for future observations of the Intergalactic Medium

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    We summarise the science cases for an ELT that were presented in the parallel session on the intergalactic medium, and the open discussion that followed the formal presentations. Observations of the IGM with an ELT provides tremendous potential for dramatic improvements in current programmes in a very wide variety of subjects. These range from fundamental physics (expansion of the Universe, nature of the dark matter, variation of physical constants), cosmology (geometry of the Universe, large-scale structure), reionisation (ionisation state of the IGM at high redshift>6, to more traditional astronomy, such as the interactions between galaxies and the IGM (metal enrichment, galactic winds and other forms of feedback), and the study of the interstellar medium in high redshift galaxies through molecules. The requirements on ELTs and their instruments for fulfilling this potential are discussed.Comment: proceedings IAU 232 "Extremely Large Telescopes", eds Whitelock, Leibundgut and Dennefeld, comments welcom

    Multiwavelength investigation of a near-solar metallicity sub-DLA at z =1.3647 towards PKS 0237-233

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    We searched for 21-cm absorption associated with the z_abs = 1.3647 absorption system toward PKS 0237-233 using the GMRT. A high quality UVES spectrum shows that C I and C I* are detected at this redshift together with C II*, Mg I, Mg II, Si II, Al II, Fe II and Mn II. The complex profiles, spread over ~300 km/s, are fitted with 21 Voigt profile components. None of these components are detected in 21-cm absorption down to a detection limit of \tau(3\sigma)\le 3x10^{-3} (or N(HI)/T_S <10^{17} cm ^-2 K^-1). We derive log N(HI)<19.30±\pm0.30 using the Lyman alpha absorption line detected in the IUE spectrum of the quasar. Mg II, Si II and Al II column densities are consistent with near solar metallicity and we measure [O/H]>-0.33. Using photoionization models constrained by the fine-structure excitations of C I and C II, and the 21-cm optical depth, we show that the C I absorption arises predominantly either in WIM or WNM in ionization and thermal equilibrium with the meta-galactic UV background dominated by QSOs and star forming galaxies. The estimated thermal pressure of the gas is of the same order of magnitude over different velocity ranges through the absorption profile (2.6\le log [P/k cm^{-3} K]\le 4.0). The gas-phase metallicity corrected for ionization is Z>0.5 Z_\odot with a signature of Fe co-production elements being under abundant compared to \alpha-process elements by ~0.5 dex. At z>1.9, C I absorption is usually associated with H_2 absorption arising from cold gas in DLAs. This system and the z=2.139 toward Tol 1037-270 are the only two systems known which show that C I absorption can also be detected in warm gas provided the metallicity is high enough. Interestingly, both the systems are part of unusual concentrations of absorption lines.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
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