1,592 research outputs found

    CRASH: a Radiative Transfer Scheme

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    We present a largely improved version of CRASH, a 3-D radiative transfer code that treats the effects of ionizing radiation propagating through a given inhomogeneous H/He cosmological density field, on the physical conditions of the gas. The code, based on a Monte Carlo technique, self-consistently calculates the time evolution of gas temperature and ionization fractions due to an arbitrary number of point/extended sources and/or diffuse background radiation with given spectra. In addition, the effects of diffuse ionizing radiation following recombinations of ionized atoms have been included. After a complete description of the numerical scheme, to demonstrate the performances, accuracy, convergency and robustness of the code we present four different test cases designed to investigate specific aspects of radiative transfer: (i) pure hydrogen isothermal Stromgren sphere; (ii) realistic Stromgren spheres; (iii) multiple overlapping point sources, and (iv) shadowing of background radiation by an intervening optically thick layer. When possible, detailed quantitative comparison of the results against either analytical solutions or 1-D standard photoionization codes has been made showing a good level of agreement. For more complicated tests the code yields physically plausible results, which could be eventually checked only by comparison with other similar codes. Finally, we briefly discuss future possible developments and cosmological applications of the code.Comment: 17 pages, 14 figures, accepted for pubblication in MNRAS, high res figures available at http://www.arcetri.astro.it/science/cosmology/IGM/radtrans.htm

    X-ray background and its correlation with the 21 cm signal

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    We use high resolution hydrodynamical simulations to study the contribution to the X-ray background from high-zz energetic sources, such as X-ray binaries, accreting nuclear black holes and shock heated interstellar medium. Adopting the model discussed in Eide et al. (2018), we find that these X-ray sources during the Epoch of Reionization (EoR) contribute less than a few percent of the unresolved X-ray background. The same sources contribute to less than \sim2\% of the measured angular power spectrum of the fluctuations of the X-ray background. The outputs of radiative transfer simulations modeling the EoR are used to evaluate the cross-correlations of X-ray background with the 21~cm signal from neutral hydrogen. Such correlation could be used to confirm the origin of the 21 cm signal, as well as give information on the properties of the X-ray sources during the EoR. We find that the correlations are positive during the early stages of reionization when most of the hydrogen is neutral, while they become negative when the intergalactic medium gets highly ionized, with the transition from positive to negative depending on both the X-ray model and the scale under consideration. With {\tt SKA} as the reference instrument for the 21~cm experiment, the predicted S/N for such correlations is <1<1 if the corresponding X-ray survey is only able to resolve and remove X-ray sources with observed flux >1015ergcm2s1>10^{-15}\,\rm erg\, cm^{-2} \, s^{-1}, while the cumulative S/N from l=1000l=1000 to 10410^{4} at xHI=0.5x_{\rm HI}=0.5 is 5\sim 5 if sources with observed flux >1017ergcm2s1>10^{-17}\,\rm erg\, cm^{-2} \, s^{-1} are detected.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figure

    Constraining the PopIII IMF with high-z GRBs

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    We study the possibility to detect and distinguish signatures of enrichment from PopIII stars in observations of PopII GRBs (GRBIIs) at high redshift by using numerical N-body/hydrodynamical simulations including atomic and molecular cooling, star formation and metal spreading from stellar populations with different initial mass functions (IMFs), yields and lifetimes. PopIII and PopII star formation regimes are followed simultaneously and both a top-heavy and a Salpeter-like IMF for pristine PopIII star formation are adopted. We find that the fraction of GRBIIs hosted in a medium previously enriched by PopIII stars (PopIII-dominated) is model independent. Typical abundance ratios, such as [Si/O] vs [C/O] and [Fe/C] vs [Si/C], can help to disentangle enrichment from massive and intermediate PopIII stars, while low-mass first stars are degenerate with regular PopII generations. The properties of galaxies hosting PopIII-dominated GRBIIs are not very sensitive to the particular assumption on the mass of the first stars.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figure

    Metal and molecule cooling in simulations of structure formation

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    Cooling is the main process leading to the condensation of gas in the dark matter potential wells and consequently to star and structure formation. In a metal-free environment, the main available coolants are H, He, H2_2 and HD; once the gas is enriched with metals, these also become important in defining the cooling properties of the gas. We discuss the implementation in Gadget-2 of molecular and metal cooling at temperatures lower that 104K\rm10^4 K, following the time dependent properties of the gas and pollution from stellar evolution. We have checked the validity of our scheme comparing the results of some test runs with previous calculations of cosmic abundance evolution and structure formation, finding excellent agreement. We have also investigated the relevance of molecule and metal cooling in some specific cases, finding that inclusion of HD cooling results in a higher clumping factor of the gas at high redshifts, while metal cooling at low temperatures can have a significant impact on the formation and evolution of cold objects.Comment: 9 pages, plus appendices. Revised version. MNRAS accepte

    CRASH3: cosmological radiative transfer through metals

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    Here we introduce CRASH3, the latest release of the 3D radiative transfer code CRASH. In its current implementation CRASH3 integrates into the reference algorithm the code Cloudy to evaluate the ionisation states of metals, self-consistently with the radiative transfer through H and He. The feedback of the heavy elements on the calculation of the gas temperature is also taken into account, making of CRASH3 the first 3D code for cosmological applications which treats self-consistently the radiative transfer through an inhomogeneous distribution of metal enriched gas with an arbitrary number of point sources and/or a background radiation. The code has been tested in idealized configurations, as well as in a more realistic case of multiple sources embedded in a polluted cosmic web. Through these validation tests the new method has been proven to be numerically stable and convergent. We have studied the dependence of the results on a number of physical quantities such as the source characteristics (spectral range and shape, intensity), the metal composition, the gas number density and metallicity.Comment: accepted for publication in MNRA

    X-ray ionization of the intergalactic medium by quasars

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    We investigate the impact of quasars on the ionization of the surrounding intergalactic medium (IGM) with the radiative transfer code \texttt{CRASH4}, now accounting for X-rays and secondary electrons. After comparing with analytic solutions, we post-process a cosmic volume (1.5×104 \approx 1.5\times 10^4 Mpc3h3^3 h^{-3}) containing a ULAS J1120+0641-like quasar (QSO) hosted by a 5×1011Mh15 \times 10^{11} {\rm M}_\odot h^{-1} dark matter (DM) halo. We find that: (i) the average HII region (R3.2R\sim3.2~pMpc in a lifetime tf=107t_f = 10^7~yrs) is mainly set by UV flux, in agreement with semi-analytic scaling relations; (ii) a largely neutral (xHII<0.001x_{\textrm{HII}} < 0.001), warm (T103T\sim 10^3~K) tail extends up to few Mpc beyond the ionization front, as a result of the X-ray flux; (iii) LyC-opaque inhomogeneities induce a line of sight (LOS) scatter in RR as high as few physical Mpc, consistent with the DLA scenario proposed to explain the anomalous size of the ULAS J1120+0641 ionized region. On the other hand, with an ionization rate N˙γ,01057\dot{N}_{\gamma,0} \sim 10^{57}~s1^{-1}, the assumed DLA clustering and gas opacity, only one LOS shows an HII region compatible with the observed one. We deduce that either the ionization rate of the QSO is at least one order of magnitude lower or the ULAS J1120+0641 bright phase is shorter than 10710^7~yrs.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS Main Journal, Accepted 2018 May 2

    Detecting Unresolved Binaries in TESS Data with Speckle Imaging

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    The Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) is conducting a two-year wide-field survey searching for transiting exoplanets around nearby bright stars that will be ideal for follow-up characterization. To facilitate studies of planet compositions and atmospheric properties, accurate and precise planetary radii need to be derived from the transit light curves. Since 40 - 50% of exoplanet host stars are in multiple star systems, however, the observed transit depth may be diluted by the flux of a companion star, causing the radius of the planet to be underestimated. High angular resolution imaging can detect companion stars that are not resolved in the TESS Input Catalog, or by seeing-limited photometry, to validate exoplanet candidates and derive accurate planetary radii. We examine the population of stellar companions that will be detectable around TESS planet candidate host stars, and those that will remain undetected, by applying the detection limits of speckle imaging to the simulated host star populations of Sullivan et al. (2015) and Barclay et al. (2018). By detecting companions with contrasts of delta m < 7 - 9 and separations of ~0.02 - 1.2'', speckle imaging can detect companion stars as faint as early M stars around A - F stars and stars as faint as mid-M around G - M stars, as well as up to 99% of the expected binary star distribution for systems located within a few hundred parsecs.Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astronomical Journal; 16 pages, 8 figures, 2 table

    PopIII signatures in the spectra of PopII/I GRBs

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    We investigate signatures of population III (PopIII) stars in the metal-enriched environment of GRBs originating from population II-I (PopII/I) stars by using abundance ratios derived from numerical simulations that follow stellar evolution and chemical enrichment. We find that at z>10z>10 more than 1010% of PopII/I GRBs explode in a medium previously enriched by PopIII stars (we refer to them as GRBII\rightarrowIII). Although the formation of GRBII\rightarrowIII is more frequent than that of pristine PopIII GRBs (GRBIIIs), we find that the expected GRBII\rightarrowIII observed rate is comparable to that of GRBIIIs, due to the usually larger luminosities of these latter. GRBII\rightarrowIII events take place preferentially in small proto-galaxies with stellar masses M104.5107M\rm M_\star \sim 10^{4.5} - 10^7\,\rm M_\odot, star formation rates SFR103101M/yr\rm SFR \sim 10^{-3}-10^{-1}\,\rm M_\odot/yr and metallicities Z104102ZZ \sim 10^{-4}-10^{-2}\,\rm Z_\odot. On the other hand, galaxies with Z<102.8ZZ < 10^{-2.8}\,\rm Z_\odot are dominated by metal enrichment from PopIII stars and should preferentially host GRBII\rightarrowIII. Hence, measured GRB metal content below this limit could represent a strong evidence of enrichment by pristine stellar populations. We discuss how to discriminate PopIII metal enrichment on the basis of various abundance ratios observable in the spectra of GRBs' afterglows. By employing such analysis, we conclude that the currently known candidates at redshift z6z\simeq 6 -- i.e. GRB 050904 \cite[][]{2006Natur.440..184K} and GRB 130606A \cite[][]{2013arXiv1312.5631C} -- are likely not originated in environments pre-enriched by PopIII stars.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures; MNRAS accepte
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