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Small-scale Intensity Mapping: Extended Halos as a Probe of the Ionizing Escape Fraction and Faint Galaxy Populations during Reionization

Abstract

We present a new method to quantify the value of the escape fraction of ionizing photons, and the existence of ultra-faint galaxies clustered around brighter objects during the epoch of cosmic reionization, using the diffuse Lyα\alpha, continuum and Hα\alpha emission observed around galaxies at z6z\sim6. We model the surface brightness profiles of the diffuse halos considering the fluorescent emission powered by ionizing photons escaping from the central galaxies, and the nebular emission from satellite star-forming sources, by extending the formalisms developed in Mas-Ribas & Dijkstra (2016) and Mas-Ribas et al. (2017). The comparison between our predicted profiles and Lyα\alpha observations at z=5.7z=5.7 and z=6.6z=6.6 favors a low ionizing escape fraction, fescion5%f_{\rm esc}^{\rm ion}\sim5\%, for galaxies in the range 19MUV21.5-19\gtrsim M_{\rm UV} \gtrsim -21.5. However, uncertainties and possible systematics in the observations do not allow for firm conclusions. We predict Hα\alpha and rest-frame visible continuum observations with JWST, and show that JWST will be able to detect extended (a few tens of kpc) fluorescent Hα\alpha emission powered by ionizing photons escaping from a bright, L5LL\gtrsim 5L^*, galaxy. Such observations can differentiate fluorescent emission from nebular emission by satellite sources. We discuss how observations and stacking of several objects may provide unique constraints on the escape fraction for faint galaxies and/or the abundance of ultra-faint radiation sources.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, re-submitted after referee report to Ap

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