4.7 Article

What does the first highly redshifted 21-cm detection tell us about early galaxies?

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 483, Issue 2, Pages 1980-1992

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/sty3260

Keywords

galaxies: high-redshift; intergalactic medium; galaxies: luminosity function, mass function; dark ages, reionization, first stars; diffuse radiation

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [AST-1636646]
  2. NASA [NNX15AK80G]
  3. NASA Solar System Exploration Research Virtual Institute [80ARC017M0006]
  4. NASA contract supporting the 'WFIRST Extragalactic Potential Observations (EXPO) Science Investigation Team' [15-WFIRST15-0004]

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The Experiment to Detect the Global Epoch of Reionization Signature (EDGES) recently reported a strong 21-cm absorption signal relative to the cosmic microwave background at z similar to 18. While its anomalous amplitude may indicate new physics, in this work we focus on the timing of the signal, as it alone provides an important constraint on galaxy formation models. Although rest-frame ultraviolet luminosity functions (UVLFs) over a broad range of redshifts are well fit by simple models in which galaxy star formation histories track the assembly of dark matter haloes, we find that these same models, with reasonable assumptions about X-ray production in star-forming galaxies, cannot generate a narrow absorption trough at z similar to 18. If verified, the EDGES signal therefore requires the fundamental inputs of galaxy formation models to evolve rapidly at z greater than or similar to 10. Unless extremely faint sources residing in haloes below the atomic cooling threshold are responsible for the EDGES signal, star formation in similar to 10(8)-10(10) M-circle dot haloes must be more efficient than expected, implying that the faint end of the UVLF at M-UV less than or similar to -12 must steepen at the highest redshifts. This steepening provides a concrete test for future galaxy surveys with the James Webb Space Telescope and ongoing efforts in lensed fields, and is required regardless of whether the amplitude of the EDGES signal is due to new cooling channels or a strong radio background in the early Universe. However, the radio background solution requires that galaxies at z > 15 emit 1-2 GHz photons with an efficiency greater than or similar to 10(2) times greater than local star-forming galaxies, posing a challenge for models of low-frequency photon production in the early Universe.

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