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Galactic ionising photon budget during the Epoch of Reionisation in the Cosmic Dawn II simulation

Authors :
Lewis, Joseph S. W.
Ocvirk, Pierre
Aubert, Dominique
Sorce, Jenny G.
Shapiro, Paul R.
Deparis, Nicolas
Dawoodbhoy, Taha
Teyssier, Romain
Yepes, Gustavo
Gottlöber, Stefan
Ahn, Kyungjin
Iliev, Ilian T.
Chardin, Jonathan
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Cosmic Dawn ("CoDa") II yields the first statistically-meaningful determination of the relative contribution to reionization by galaxies of different halo mass, from a fully-coupled radiation-hydrodynamics simulation of the epoch of reionization large enough ($\sim$ 100 Mpc) to model global reionization while resolving the formation of all galactic halos above $\sim 10^8 M_\odot$. Cell transmission inside high-mass haloes is bi-modal -- ionized cells are transparent, while neutral cells absorb the photons their stars produce - and the halo escape fraction $f_{esc}$ reflects the balance of star formation rate ("SFR") between these modes. The latter is increasingly prevalent at higher halo mass, driving down $f_{esc}$ (we provide analytical fits to our results), whereas halo escape luminosity, proportional to $f_{esc} \times$SFR, increases with mass. Haloes with dark matter masses within $6.10^{8} M_\odot < M_h < 3.10^{10} M_\odot$ produce $\sim 80$% of the escaping photons at z=7, when the Universe is 50% ionized, making them the main drivers of cosmic reionization. Less massive haloes, though more numerous, have low SFRs and contribute less than 10% of the photon budget then, despite their high $f_{esc}$. High mass haloes are too few and too opaque, contributing $<10$% despite their high SFRs. The dominant mass range is lower (higher) at higher (lower) redshift, as mass function and reionization advance together (e.g. at z$=8.5$, x$_{\rm HI}=0.9$, $M_h < 5.10^9 M_\odot$ haloes contributed $\sim$80%). Galaxies with UV magnitudes $M_{AB1600}$ between $-12$ and $-19$ dominated reionization between z$=6$ and 8.<br />Comment: Submitted to MNRAS on 09/01/2020. Accepted on 12/06/2020

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2001.07785
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/staa1748