4.7 Article

Radiative transfer effects on the Lyα forest

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 364, Issue 4, Pages 1429-1440

Publisher

BLACKWELL PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2966.2005.09682.x

Keywords

radiative transfer; methods : numerical; cosmology : theory; diffuse radiation; large-scale structure of Universe

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Strong observational evidence for a fluctuating ultraviolet background (UVB) has been accumulating through a number of studies of the HI and He II Ly alpha forest as well as accurate intergalactic medium (IGM) metallicity measurements. UVB fluctuations could arise both from the inhomogeneous distribution of the ionizing sources and/or from radiative transfer (RT) through the filamentary IGM. In this study we investigate, via numerical simulations, the role of RT effects, such as shadowing, self-shielding and filtering of the ionizing radiation, in giving rise to a fluctuating UVB. We focus on possible detectable signatures of these effects on quantities derived from Ly alpha forest spectra, as photoionization rate fluctuations, eta (equivalent to N-He II/N-H I) parameter distributions and the IGM temperature at z approximate to 3. We find that RT induces fluctuations up to 60 per cent in the UVB, which are tightly correlated to the density field. The UVB mean intensity is progressively suppressed toward higher densities and photon energies above 4 Ryd, due to the high He II opacity. Shielding of overdense regions (Delta greater than or similar to 5) from cosmic He II ionizing radiation produces a decreasing trend of eta with overdensity. Furthermore, we find that the mean eta value inferred from HI - He II Ly alpha forest observations can be explained only by properly accounting for the actual IGM opacity. We outline and discuss several implications of our findings.

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