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The Fluctuating Intergalactic Radiation Field at Redshiftsz= 2.3–2.9 from He<scp>ii</scp>and H<scp>i</scp>Absorption toward HE 2347−4342

Authors :
Mark L. Giroux
Gerard A. Kriss
Dieter Reimers
J. Michael Shull
Jason Tumlinson
Source :
The Astrophysical Journal. 600:570-579
Publication Year :
2004
Publisher :
American Astronomical Society, 2004.

Abstract

We provide an in-depth analysis of the He II and H I absorption in the intergalactic medium (IGM) at redshifts z = 2.3-2.9 toward HE 2347-4342, using spectra from the Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer (FUSE) and the Ultraviolet-Visual Echelle Spectrograph (UVES) on the VLT telescope. Following up on our earlier study (Kriss et al. 2001, Science, 293, 1112), we focus here on two major topics: (1) small-scale variability (Delta z = 10^-3) in the ratio eta = N(He II)/N(H I); and (2) an observed correlation of high-eta absorbers (soft radiation fields) with voids in the (H I) Ly-alpha distribution. These effects may reflect fluctuations in the ionizing sources on scales of 1 Mpc, together with radiative transfer through a filamentary IGM whose opacity variations control the penetration of 1-5 ryd radiation over 30-40 Mpc distances. Owing to photon statistics and backgrounds, we can measure optical depths over the ranges 0.1 &lt; tau(HeII) &lt; 2.3 and 0.02 &lt; tau(HI) &lt; 3.9, and reliably determine values of eta = 4 tau(HeII)/tau(HI) over the range 0.1 to 460. Values of eta = 20-200 are consistent with models of photoionization by quasars with observed spectral indices alpha_s = 0-3. Values of eta &gt; 200 may require additional contributions from starburst galaxies, heavily filtered quasar radiation, or density variations. Regions with eta &lt; 30 may indicate the presence of local hard sources. We find that eta is higher in &quot;void&quot; regions, where H I is weak or undetected and 80% of the path length has eta &gt; 100. These voids may be ionized by soft sources (dwarf starbursts) or by QSO radiation softened by escape from the AGN cores or transfer through the &quot;cosmic web&quot;. The apparent differences in ionizing spectra may help to explain the 1.45 Gyr lag between the reionization epochs, z(HI) = 6.2 +/-0.2 and z(HeII) = 2.8 +/-0.2.&lt;br /&gt;27 pages, 7 figures, to appear in ApJ

Details

ISSN :
15384357 and 0004637X
Volume :
600
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Astrophysical Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....94c7ff3a5199d9bdcd3eaa98b7c23cc1