Ultraviolet luminosity density of the universe during the epoch of reionization

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Abstract

The spatial fluctuations of the extragalactic background light trace the total emission from all stars and galaxies in the Universe. A multiwavelength study can be used to measure the integrated emission from first galaxies during reionization when the Universe was about 500 million years old. Here we report arcmin-scale spatial fluctuations in one of the deepest sky surveys with the Hubble Space Telescope in five wavebands between 0.6 and 1.6 mm. We model-fit the angular power spectra of intensity fluctuation measurements to find the ultraviolet luminosity density of galaxies at redshifts greater than 8 to be log ρUV 27:4+0.2-1.2 ergs-1Hz-1Mpc-3 (1σ). This level of integrated light emission allows for a significant surface density of fainter primeval galaxies that are below the point-source detection level in current surveys.

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Mitchell-Wynne, K., Cooray, A., Gong, Y., Ashby, M., Dolch, T., Ferguson, H., … Smidt, J. (2015). Ultraviolet luminosity density of the universe during the epoch of reionization. Nature Communications, 6. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms8945

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