Tuesday, June 5, 2012

1206.0726 (Jaime E. Forero-Romero et al.)

Effects of Star Formation Stochasticity on the Lyα & Lyman Continuum Emission from Dwarf Galaxies    [PDF]

Jaime E. Forero-Romero, Mark Dijkstra
Observations of distant galaxies play a key role in improving our understanding of the Epoch of Reionization (EoR). The observed Ly{\alpha} emission line strength - quantified by its restframe equivalent width (EW) - provides a valuable diagnostic of stellar populations and dust in galaxies during and after the EoR. In this paper we quantify the effects of star formation stochasticity on the predicted Ly{\alpha} EW in dwarf galaxies, using the publicly available code SLUG ('Stochastically Light Up Galaxies'). We compute the number of hydrogen ionizing photons, as well as flux in the Far UV for a set of models with star formation rates (SFR) in the range 10-3-1 M\odot yr-1. From these fluxes we compute the luminosity, L{\alpha}, and the EW of the Ly{\alpha} line. We find that stochasticity alone induces a broad distribution in L{\alpha} and EW at a fixed SFR, and that the widths of these distributions decrease with increasing SFR. We parameterize the EW probability density function (PDF) as an SFR-dependent double power law. We find that it is possible to have EW as low as \simEW0/4 and as high as \sim 3\timesEW0, where EW0 denotes the expected EW in the absence of stochasticity. We argue that stochasticity may therefore be important when linking drop-out and narrow-band selected galaxies, when identifying population III galaxies, and that it may help to explain the large EW (EW \gtrsim 100 - 200 \{AA}) observed for a fraction of Ly{\alpha} selected galaxies. Finally, we show that stochasticity can also affect the inferred escape fraction of ionizing photons from galaxies. In particular, we argue that stochasticity may simultaneously explain the observed anomalous ratios of the Lyman continuum flux density to the (non-ionizing) UV continuum density in so-called Lyman-Bump galaxies at z = 3.1, as well as the absence of such objects among a sample of z = 1.3 drop-out galaxies.
View original: http://arxiv.org/abs/1206.0726

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