4.6 Article

High-redshift active galactic nuclei and H I reionisation: limits from the unresolved X-ray background

Journal

ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
Volume 575, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

EDP SCIENCES S A
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/201525627

Keywords

cosmology: observations; X-rays: diffuse background; galaxies: active

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The rapidly declining population of bright quasars at z greater than or similar to 3 appears to make an increasingly smaller contribution to the ionising background at the H I Lyman limit. It is thererfore generally thought that massive stars in (pre-) Galactic systems may provide the additional ionising flux needed to complete H I reionisation by z greater than or similar to 6. A galaxy-dominated background, however, may require that the escape fraction of Lyman continuum radiation from high-redshift galaxies is as high as 10%, which is somewhat at odds with (admittedly scarce) observational constraints. High escape fractions from dwarf galaxies have been advocated, or, alternatively, a so-far undetected (or barely detected) population of unobscured, high-redshift faint AGNs. Here we examine the latter hypothesis and show that such sources, to be consistent with the measured level of the unresolved X-ray background at z = 0, can provide a fraction of the H II filling factor no larger than 13% by z similar or equal to 6. The fraction rises to less than or similar to 27% in the somewhat extreme case of a constant comoving redshift evolution of the AGN emissivity. This still calls for a mean escape fraction of ionising photons from high-z galaxies of greater than or similar to 10%.

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