Journal
ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 576, Issue 1, Pages L1-L4Publisher
UNIV CHICAGO PRESS
DOI: 10.1086/343101
Keywords
cosmology : theory; early universe; galaxies : formation
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For a source of Lyalpha radiation embedded in a neutral intergalactic medium (IGM) prior to the reionization epoch, the Lyalpha emission line is strongly suppressed by the intervening IGM. The damping wing of the so-called Gunn-Peterson trough can extend to the red side of the emission line and erase a significant fraction of the total line flux. However, the transmitted fraction increases with the size of the local cosmological H II region surrounding the source, and therefore with the ionizing luminosity and age of the source. Motivated by the recent discovery of a Lyalpha-emitting galaxy at a redshift z = 6.56 (Hu et al.), possibly prior to the reionization of the IGM, we z p 6.56 revisit the effects of a neutral IGM on the Lyalpha emission line. We show that for faint sources with little or even no ionizing continuum, a sufficiently broad (Deltav greater than or similar to 300 km s(-1)) emission line can still remain observable. In particular, the line detected by Hu et al. is consistent with a source embedded in a neutral IGM. We provide characterizations of the asymmetry and total transmitted flux of the Lyalpha line as functions of the ionizing emissivity of its source. We argue that a statistical sample of Lyalpha emitters extending beyond the reionization redshift can be a useful probe of reionization.
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