Detections of [C II] 158 μm and [O III] 88 μm in a Local Lyman Continuum Emitter, Mrk 54, and its Implications to High-redshift ALMA Studies

Abstract

We present integral field, far-infrared (FIR) spectroscopy of Mrk 54, a local Lyman Continuum Emitter (LCE), obtained with FIFI-LS on the Stratospheric Observatory for Infrared Astronomy. This is only the second time, after Haro 11, that [C II] 158 μm and [O III] 88 μm spectroscopy of the known LCEs have been obtained. We find that Mrk 54 has a strong [C II] emission that accounts for 1% of the total FIR luminosity, whereas it has only moderate [O III] emission, resulting in the low [O III]/[C II] luminosity ratio of 0.220.06. In order to investigate whether [O III]/[C II] is a useful tracer of f esc (LyC escape fraction), we examine the correlations of [O III]/[C II] and (i) the optical line ratio of O32 [O III] 5007 /[O II] 3727 , (ii) specific star formation rate, (iii) [O III] 88 μm/[O I] 63 μm ratio, (iv) gas phase metallicity, and (v) dust temperature based on a combined sample of Mrk 54 and the literature data from the Herschel Dwarf Galaxy Survey and the LITTLE THINGS Survey. We find that galaxies with high [O III]/[C II] luminosity ratios could be the result of high ionization (traced by O32), bursty star formation, high ionized-to-neutral gas volume filling factors (traced by [O III] 88 μm/[O I] 63 μm), and low gas-phase metallicities, which is in agreement with theoretical predictions. We present an empirical relation between the [O III]/[C II] ratio and f esc based on the combination of the [O III]/[C II] and O32 correlation, and the known relation between O32 and f esc. The relation implies that high-redshift galaxies with high [O III]/[C II] ratios revealed by ALMA may have f esc0.1, significantly contributing to the cosmic reionization.

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