Bibcode
Paardekooper, J.-P.; Khochfar, Sadegh; Dalla Vecchia, C.
Bibliographical reference
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 451, Issue 3, p.2544-2563
Advertised on:
8
2015
Citations
196
Refereed citations
184
Description
Protogalaxies forming in low-mass dark matter haloes are thought to
provide the majority of ionizing photons needed to reionize the
Universe, due to their high escape fractions of ionizing photons. We
study how the escape fraction in high-redshift galaxies relates to the
physical properties of the halo in which the galaxies form, by computing
escape fractions in more than 75 000 haloes between redshifts 27 and 6
that were extracted from the First Billion Years project,
high-resolution cosmological hydrodynamical simulations of galaxy
formation. We find that the main constraint on the escape fraction is
the gas column density in a radius of 10 pc around the stellar
populations, causing a strong mass dependence of the escape fraction.
The lower potential well in haloes with M200 ≲
108 M⊙ results in low column densities that
can be penetrated by radiation from young stars (age <5 Myr). In
haloes with M200 ≳ 108 M⊙
supernova feedback is important, but only ˜30 per cent of the
haloes in this mass range have an escape fraction higher than 1 per
cent. We find a large range of escape fractions in haloes with similar
properties, caused by different distributions of the dense gas in the
halo. This makes it very hard to predict the escape fraction on the
basis of halo properties and results in a highly anisotropic escape
fraction. The strong mass dependence, the large spread and the large
anisotropy of the escape fraction may strongly affect the topology of
reionization and is something current models of cosmic reionization
should strive to take into account.
Related projects
Numerical Astrophysics: Galaxy Formation and Evolution
How galaxies formed and evolved through cosmic time is one of the key questions of modern astronomy and astrophysics. Cosmological time- and length-scales are so large that the evolution of individual galaxies cannot be directly observed. Only through numerical simulations can one follow the emergence of cosmic structures within the current
Claudio
Dalla Vecchia