Gravitational lensing reveals ionizing ultraviolet photons escaping from a distant galaxy.
T Emil Rivera-ThorsenHåkon DahleJohn ChisholmMichael K FlorianMax GronkeJane R RigbyMichael D GladdersGuillaume MahlerKeren SharonMatthew BaylissPublished in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2020)
During the epoch of reionization, neutral gas in the early Universe was ionized by hard ultraviolet radiation emitted by young stars in the first galaxies. To do so, ionizing ultraviolet photons must escape from the host galaxy. We present Hubble Space Telescope observations of the gravitationally lensed post-reionization galaxy PSZ1-ARC G311.6602-18.4624 (nicknamed the "Sunburst Arc"), revealing bright, multiply imaged ionizing photon escape from a compact star-forming region through a narrow channel in an optically thick gas. The gravitational lensing magnification shows how ionizing photons escape this galaxy, contributing to the reionization of the Universe. The multiple sight lines to the source probe absorption by intergalactic neutral hydrogen on a scale of less than a few hundred parsecs.