Abstract
We study the properties of self-shielding intergalactic absorption systems and their implications for the ionizing background. We find that cosmological simulations post-processed with detailed radiative transfer calculations generally are able to reproduce the observed abundance of Lyman-limit systems, and we highlight possible discrepancies between the observations and simulations. This comparison tests cosmological simulations at overdensities of ∼100. Furthermore, we show that the properties of Lyman-limit systems in these simulations, in simple semianalytic arguments, and as suggested by recent observations indicate that a small change in the ionizing emissivity of the sources would have resulted in a much larger change in the amplitude of the intergalactic H I-ionizing background (with this scaling strengthening with increasing redshift). This strong scaling could explain the rapid evolution in the Lyα forest transmission observed at z ≈ 6. Our calculations agree with the suggestion of simpler models that the comoving ionizing emissivity was constant or even increasing from z = 3 to 6. Our calculations also provide a more rigorous estimate than in previous studies for the clumping factor of intergalactic gas after reionization, which we estimate was ≈2-3 at z = 6. © 2011. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.
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McQuinn, M., Peng Oh, S., & Faucher-Giguère, C. A. (2011). On Lyman-limit systems and the evolution of the intergalactic ionizing background. Astrophysical Journal, 743(1). https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-637X/743/1/82
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