The JWST/PASSAGE Survey: Testing Reionization Histories with JWST's First Unbiased Survey for Lyman alpha Emitters at Redshifts 7.5-9.5
astro-ph.GA
/ Authors
Axel Runnholm, Matthew J. Hayes, Vihang Mehta, Matthew A. Malkan, Claudia Scarlata, Kalina V. Nedkova, Marc Rafelski, Benedetta Vulcani, Mason Huberty, E. Christian Herenz
and 18 more authors
Anne Hutter, Sean Bruton, Ayan Acharyya, Hakim Atek, Ivano Baronchelli, Andrew J. Battisti, Maruša Bradač, Andrew J. Bunker, Y. Sophia Dai, Clea Hannahs, Farhanul Hasan, Keunho J. Kim, Nicha Leethochawalit, Yu-Heng Lin, Michael J. Rutkowski, Alberto Saldana-Lopez, Zahra Sattari, Xin Wang
/ Abstract
Lyman $α$ (Ly$α$) emission is one of few observable features of galaxies that can trace the neutral hydrogen content in the Universe during the Epoch of Reionization (EoR). To accomplish this we need an efficient way to survey for Ly$α$ emitters (LAEs) at redshifts beyond 7, requiring unbiased emission-line observations that are both sufficiently deep and wide to cover enough volume to detect them. Here we present results from PASSAGE -- a pure-parallel JWST/NIRISS slitless spectroscopic survey to detect Ly$α$ emitters deep into the EoR, without the bias of photometric preselection. We identify four LAEs at $7.5\leq z\leq9.5$ in four surveyed pointings, and estimate the luminosity function (LF). We find that the LF does show a marked decrease compared to post-reionization measurements, but the change is a factor of $\lesssim 10$, which is less than expected from theoretical calculations and simulations, as well as observational expectations from the pre-JWST literature. Modeling of the IGM and expected \lya\ profiles implies these galaxies reside in ionized bubbles of $\gtrapprox 2$ physical Mpc. We also report that in the four fields we detect {3,1,0,0} LAEs, which could indicate strong field-to-field variation in the LAE distribution, consistent with a patchy HI distribution at $z\sim8$. We compare the recovered LAE number counts with expectations from simulations and discuss the potential implications for reionization and its morphology.