MXDFz4.4: A LyC emitter 250Myr after the epoch of reionization and a first test of Ly-alpha morphology as a tracer of LyC escape at high redshift
/ Authors
I. Goovaerts, M. Rafelski, A. Beckett, Grecco A. Oyarzún, A. Citro, Farhanul Hasan, K. Nedkova, C. Hawcroft, A. Koekemoer, M. Revalski
and 7 more authors
Matthew J. Hayes, C. Scarlata, R. Lucas, N. Grogin, D. Stark, P. Suin, N. Pirzkal
/ Abstract
Assessing the contribution of ionizing sources to cosmic reionization is a central goal of extragalactic astrophysics. Understanding and quantifying ionizing escape remains challenging near the epoch of reionization. We present the highest-redshift Lyman continuum (LyC) emitter detected to date, MXDFz4.4 at z=4.442 in the MUSE eXtremely Deep Field, observed only ~0.25Gyr after the end of reionization. A high confidence Ly-alpha line confirms the redshift. LyC flux is detected at 10.3sigma in the F435W filter with a flux of 4.2+/-0.5nJy, corresponding to a flux measurement at 8.0sigma. After correcting for the intrinsic production of LyC photons and the IGM opacity at z=4.44, we derive high escape fractions, ranging from 50 - 100%. We apply established low-redshift tracers of LyC escape and, for the first time at high redshift, promising Ly-alpha morphological tracers such as the halo fraction. SED fitting indicates the presence of a recent burst of star formation; we explore its impact on the production and escape of ionizing photons. Ly-alpha-based tracers of LyC escape reveal a complex scenario in which the recent burst strong influences LyC production and escape, combined with a more evolved stellar population. This interpretation is supported by UV diagnostics, including the star formation rate surface density and sSFR. Our results provide cautious support for the Ly-alpha halo fraction as a LyC escape tracer at high redshift. Considering the burst-driven enhancement in LyC production and escape, we conclude that stochastic star formation in the early Universe likely plays a significant role in the contribution of galaxies to cosmic reionization.