4.7 Article

Early reionization by the first galaxies

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 344, Issue 1, Pages L7-L12

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-8711.2003.06976.x

Keywords

galaxies : formation; cosmology : observations; cosmology : theory; large-scale structure of Universe

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Large-scale polarization of the cosmic microwave background measured by the WMAP satellite requires a mean optical depth to Thomson scattering, tau(e) similar to 0.17. The reionization of the Universe must therefore have begun at relatively high redshift. We have studied the reionization process using supercomputer simulations of a large and representative region of a universe which has cosmological parameters consistent with the WMAP results (Omega(m) = 0.3, Omega(Lambda) = 0.7, h = 0.7, Omega(b) = 0.04, n = 1 and sigma(8) = 0.9). Our simulations follow both the radiative transfer of ionizing photons and the formation and evolution of the galaxy population which produces them. A previously published model with ionizing photon production as expected for zero-metallicity stars distributed according to a standard stellar initial mass function (IMF) (10(61) photons per unit solar mass of formed stars) and with a moderate photon escape fraction from galaxies (5 per cent), produces tau(e) = 0.104, which is within 1.0 to 1.5sigma of the 'best' WMAP value. Values of up to 0.16 can be produced by taking larger escape fractions or a top-heavy IMF. The data do not require a separate populations of 'miniquasars' or of stars forming in objects with total masses below 10(9) M-.. Reconciling such early reionization with the observed Gunn-Peterson troughs in z > 6 quasars may be challenging. Possible resolutions of this problem are discussed.

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