Using Ly$α$ Transmitted Spectrum to Probe IGM Transmission and Identify Ionized Structures in Cosmic Reionization
Weida Hu, Casey Papovich, Lu Shen, Pablo Arrabal Haro, Bren E. Backhaus + 14 more
TLDR
This paper uses JWST/NIRSpec to measure intergalactic medium transmission and identify a large ionized bubble during cosmic reionization.
Key contributions
- Measure IGM transmission at 4.5 < z < 6.5 using 143 JWST/NIRSpec galaxy spectra, consistent with quasar data.
- Identify a large, highly ionized bubble (GS-z6IS) at z~5.75-6 with significantly enhanced IGM transmission.
- The bubble is associated with a galaxy overdensity, whose members show enhanced Lyα visibility and broader EWs.
- Demonstrates high-S/N galaxy spectra as a powerful new method to trace ionized structures in reionization.
Why it matters
This study provides direct evidence of large ionized bubbles during cosmic reionization, a critical phase of cosmic evolution. It offers a novel and powerful method using galaxy spectra to map these structures. This approach will significantly advance our understanding of how the universe became transparent to light.
Original Abstract
We present a study of intergalactic medium (IGM) transmission at $4.5 < z < 6.5$ using high-signal-to-noise JWST/NIRSpec prism spectroscopy of 143 galaxies at $5<z<7$ from the CAPERS and JADES surveys. By comparing the observed flux blueward of Ly$α$ emission line to the prediction of spectral energy distribution modeling, we directly measure the IGM transmission along the individual galaxy sightlines. The average transmission measured from these galaxy sightlines is consistent with previous measurements based on luminous quasars. Current NIRSpec spectroscopy is sufficiently deep to probe IGM transmission on single sightlines. We find evidence for a highly ionized structure, \bubble, at $z\sim 5.75-6$ in the GOODS-S field based on the analysis of a high-S/N spectrum of one galaxy, GS-18846, at $z=6.335$. The IGM transmission of GS-z6IS is $0.17\pm0.02$, an order of magnitude higher than the average of previous measurements at this redshift. This structure has a line-of-sight scale of $\sim110$ cMpc and spatially extends over at least $21\times17$ cMpc$^2$. GS-z6IS is associated with a known large-scale galaxy overdensity at the same redshift, whose member galaxies show enhanced Ly$α$ visibility and a broader Ly$α$ equivalent width distribution compared to field galaxies at similar redshift. This result supports the interpretation that Ly$α$ overdensity can trace bubbles of increased IGM transmission, although environmental effects on galaxy properties may also contribute. Our study demonstrates that high-S/N galaxy spectra offer a powerful new approach to tracing ionized structures during the epoch of reionization.
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