Statistical Detection of the HeII Transverse Proximity Effect: Evidence for Sustained Quasar Activity for >25 Million Years
Abstract
The HeII transverse proximity effect -- enhanced HeII Lyα~transmission in a background sightline caused by the ionizing radiation of a foreground quasar -- offers a unique opportunity to probe the morphology of quasar-driven HeII reionization. We conduct a comprehensive spectroscopic survey to find z3 quasars in the foreground of 22 background quasar sightlines with HST/COS HeII Lyα~transmission spectra. With our two-tiered survey strategy, consisting of a deep pencil-beam survey and a shallow wide-field survey, we discover 131 new quasars, which we complement with known SDSS/BOSS quasars in our fields. Using a restricted sample of 66 foreground quasars with inferred HeII photoionization rates greater than the expected UV background at these redshifts (QSOHeII > 5 × 10-16\,s-1) we perform the first statistical analysis of the HeII transverse proximity effect. Our results show qualitative evidence for a large object-to-object variance: among the four foreground quasars with the highest QSOHeII only one (previously known) quasar is associated with a significant HeII transmission spike. We perform a stacking analysis to average down these fluctuations, and detect an excess in the average HeII transmission near the foreground quasars at 3σ significance. This statistical evidence for the transverse proximity effect is corroborated by a clear dependence of the signal strength on QSOHeII. Our detection places a purely geometrical lower limit on the quasar lifetime of tQ > 25\,Myr. Improved modeling would additionally constrain quasar obscuration and the mean free path of HeII-ionizing photons.
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