4.7 Article

Radiation Backgrounds at Cosmic Dawn: X-Rays from Compact Binaries

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 840, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.3847/1538-4357/aa6af9

Keywords

dark ages, reionization, first stars; diffuse radiation; intergalactic medium; X-rays: binaries

Funding

  1. NSF [AST-1229745]
  2. NASA [NNX12AF87G]
  3. Pauli Center for Theoretical Studies Zurich
  4. NASA da [15-WFIRST15-0004]
  5. Prefecture of the Ile-de-France Region
  6. Swiss National Science Foundation [PZ00P2-148123]
  7. Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF) [PZ00P2_148123] Funding Source: Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF)

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We compute the expected X-ray diffuse background and radiative feedback on the intergalactic medium (IGM) from X-ray binaries prior to and during the epoch of reionization. The cosmic evolution of compact binaries is followed using a population synthesis technique that treats separately neutron stars and black hole binaries in different spectral states and is calibrated to reproduce the observed X-ray properties of galaxies at z less than or similar to 4. Together with an updated empirical determination of the cosmic history of star formation, recent modeling of the stellar mass-metallicity relation, and a scheme for absorption by the IGM that accounts for the presence of ionized H II bubbles during the epoch of reionization, our detailed calculations provide refined predictions of the X-ray volume emissivity and filtered radiation background from normal galaxies at z greater than or similar to 6. Radiative transfer effects modulate the background spectrum, which shows a characteristic peak between 1 and 2 keV. Because of the energy dependence of photoabsorption, soft X-ray photons are produced by local sources, while more energetic radiation arrives unattenuated from larger cosmological volumes. While the filtering of X-ray radiation through the IGM slightly increases the mean excess energy per photoionization, it also weakens the radiation intensity below 1 keV, lowering the mean photoionization and heating rates. Numerical integration of the rate and energy equations shows that the contribution of X-ray binaries to the ionization of the bulk IGM is negligible, with the electron fraction never exceeding 1%. Direct He I photoionizations are the main source of IGM heating, and the temperature of the largely neutral medium in between H II cavities increases above the temperature of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) only at z less than or similar to 10, when the volume filling factor of H II bubbles is already greater than or similar to 0.1. Therefore, in this scenario, it is only at relatively late epochs that neutral intergalactic hydrogen may be observable in 21 cm emission against the CMB.

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