Should my question really be closed?
No, I don't think so. Your question was based on a misunderstanding of the difference between slices and arrays, and that one creates references upon assignment, unlike the other that creates copies. This sort of misunderstanding by itself is not really a reason to close a question.
The stated close reason is "Not reproducible or caused by a typo", which doesn't apply here; the behavior of the code you've shown is definitely reproducible, and I wouldn't describe the misunderstanding as a typo either. Note that this close reason also says:
... was resolved in a way less likely to help future readers.
which I also think doesn't apply. I could see future programmers having the same misunderstanding that you did, and this question could be useful for them.
Your question may be off-topic for other reasons, but I don't think they apply either. Your question has the necessary details, and is clear enough to be answerable. Your question is also sufficiently narrowly scoped; it's asking about the behavior in a particular instance of a single language construct. There are other off-topic reasons that I won't bother mentioning since I think it's quite obvious that they don't apply here.
There is one reason to close an on-topic question, and that's if it's been asked before. I couldn't find if this question was asked before, but admittedly I didn't search for very long, and I'm not very familiar with the existing content in the go tag, so I could have missed it. I did find this, and this, which if you read through those posts, you will probably discover the answer to your question. However, the questions themselves aren't duplicates in my opinion, and so they shouldn't be closed with either of those targets.
... I edited that question to replace array with slice. Is what I did right, or should I leave the question as it was in the original revision?
That depends on whether you've already received an answer. In this case, you have, and so you need to be very careful not to invalidate any of those answers. If you take a look at the first line of answer you accepted, it says:
In your example code, you're working with slices, not arrays.
After your edit, this sentence is quite confusing, since your question no longer contains the word "array" (except in the P.S. at the bottom of the question, but that's still not very clear). If you really feel the question needs to be edited, you can ask the author of the answer if they are ok with how you want to edit the question. If they disagree, or don't respond, then you shouldn't edit the question.
As it happens, I think your question was fine in its original form, and so you could just rollback to your original revision, and then the answers are not invalidated, and don't need to be edited at all.
Also, after I edited the question I still got a downvote, so should I just delete the question?
Well, there's an answer to your question that has upvotes, so you can't delete the question even if you want to. I wouldn't worry about the downvote, those things happen, and you have enough reputation to not need to worry about it. I haven't looked at your profile, so it's possible that you have a track record of asking bad questions, and then downvotes could contribute to a question ban, but deleting the question is not going to help you with that anyway.
If you've received answers, and none of them have any upvotes, then you can delete the question, but I suggest not doing that. It's inconsiderate to the users who took the trouble of answering your question.
If you've not received any answers at all, then it's up to you entirely. No one else is affected by your deleting the question, and so you can delete it if you want.