1,098 research outputs found
The 21-cm Background from the Cosmic Dark Ages: Minihalos and the Intergalactic Medium before Reionization
The H atoms inside minihalos (i.e. halos with virial temperatures T_vir <
10^4 K, in the mass range roughly from 10^4 M_sun to 10^8 M_sun) during the
cosmic dark ages in a LCDM universe produce a redshifted background of
collisionally-pumped 21-cm line radiation which can be seen in emission
relative to the cosmic microwave background (CMB). Previously, we used
semi-analytical calculations of the 21-cm signal from individual halos of
different mass and redshift and the evolving mass function of minihalos to
predict the mean brightness temperature of this 21-cm background and its
angular fluctuations. Here we use high-resolution cosmological N-body and
hydrodynamic simulations of structure formation at high redshift (z > 8) to
compute the mean brightness temperature of this background from both minihalos
and the intergalactic medium (IGM) prior to the onset of Ly-alpha radiative
pumping. We find that the 21-cm signal from gas in collapsed, virialized
minihalos dominates over that from the diffuse shocked gas in the IGM.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures. To appear in proceedings of UC Irvine May 2005
workshop on "First Light & Reionization", eds. E. Barton & A. Cooray, New
Astronomy Reviews, in pres
Measuring the History of Cosmic Reionization using the 21-cm PDF from Simulations
The 21-cm PDF (i.e., distribution of pixel brightness temperatures) is
expected to be highly non-Gaussian during reionization and to provide important
information on the distribution of density and ionization. We measure the 21-cm
PDF as a function of redshift in a large simulation of cosmic reionization and
propose a simple empirical fit. Guided by the simulated PDF, we then carry out
a maximum likelihood analysis of the ability of upcoming experiments to measure
the shape of the 21-cm PDF and derive from it the cosmic reionization history.
Under the strongest assumptions, we find that upcoming experiments can measure
the reionization history in the mid to late stages of reionization to 1-10%
accuracy. Under a more flexible approach that allows for four free parameters
at each redshift, a similar accuracy requires the lower noise levels of
second-generation 21-cm experiments.Comment: 13 pages, 16 figures, submitted to MNRA
Reionization of the Local Group of Galaxies
We present the first detailed structure formation and radiative transfer
simulations of the reionization history of our cosmic neighbourhood. To this
end, we follow the formation of the Local Group of galaxies and nearby clusters
by means of constrained simulations, which use the available observational
constraints to construct a representation of those structures which reproduces
their actual positions and properties at the present time. We find that the
reionization history of the Local Group is strongly dependent on the assumed
photon production efficiencies of the ionizing sources, which are still poorly
constrained. If sources are relatively efficient, i.e. the process is
'photon-rich', the Local Group is primarily ionized externally by the nearby
clusters. Alternatively, if the sources are inefficient, i.e. reionization is
'photon-poor' the Local Group evolves largely isolated and reionizes itself.
The mode of reionization, external vs. internal, has important implications for
the evolution of our neighbourhood, in terms of e.g. its satellite galaxy
populations and primordial stellar populations. This therefore provides an
important avenue for understanding the young universe by detailed studies of
our nearby structures.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures (all in colour), submitted to MNRA
Current models of the observable consequences of cosmic reionization and their detectability
A number of large current experiments aim to detect the signatures of the cosmic reionization at redshifts z > 6. Their success depends crucially on understanding the character of the reionization process and its observable consequences and designing the best strategies to use. We use large-scale simulations of cosmic reionization to evaluate the reionization signatures at redshifted 21-cm and small-scale cosmic microwave background (CMB) anisotropies in the best current model for the background universe, with fundamental cosmological parameters given by Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe three-year results. We find that the optimal frequency range for observing the `global step of the 21-cm emission is 120150 MHz, while statistical studies should aim at 140160 MHz, observable by GMRT. Some strongly non-Gaussian brightness features should be detectable at frequencies up to ~190 MHz. In terms of sensitivity-signal trade-off relatively low resolutions, corresponding to beams of at least a few arcminutes, are preferable. The CMB anisotropy signal from the kinetic SunyaevZel'dovich effect from reionized patches peaks at tens of K at arcminute scales and has an rms of ~1 K, and should be observable by the Atacama Cosmology Telescope and the South Pole Telescope. We discuss the various observational issues and the uncertainties involved, mostly related to the poorly known reionization parameters and, to a lesser extend, to the uncertainties in the background cosmology
Nonlinear Bias of Cosmological Halo Formation in the Early Universe
We present estimates of the nonlinear bias of cosmological halo formation,
spanning a wide range in the halo mass from to , based upon both a suite of high-resolution cosmological
N-body simulations and theoretical predictions. The halo bias is expressed in
terms of the mean bias and stochasticity as a function of local overdensity
(), under different filtering scales, which is realized as the density
of individual cells in uniform grids. The sampled overdensities span a range
wide enough to provide the fully nonlinear bias effect on the formation of
haloes. A strong correlation between and halo population overdensity
is found, along with sizable stochasticity. We find that the
empirical mean halo bias matches, with good accuracy, the prediction by the
peak-background split method based on the excursion set formalism, as long as
the empirical, globally-averaged halo mass function is used. Consequently, this
bias formalism is insensitive to uncertainties caused by varying halo
identification schemes, and can be applied generically. We also find that the
probability distribution function of biased halo numbers has wider distribution
than the pure Poisson shot noise, which is attributed to the sub-cell scale
halo correlation. We explicitly calculate this correlation function and show
that both overdense and underdense regions have positive correlation, leading
to stochasticity larger than the Poisson shot noise in the range of haloes and
halo-collapse epochs we study.Comment: 18 pages, 8 figures, in press for publication in MNRAS; supplementary
material (additional 16 figures) separately supplied (supplement.pdf) as a
part of source file
Simulating the Impact of X-ray Heating during the Cosmic Dawn
Upcoming observations of the 21-cm signal from the Epoch of Reionization will
soon provide the first direct detection of this era. This signal is influenced
by many astrophysical effects, including long range X-ray heating of the
intergalactic gas. During the preceding Cosmic Dawn era the impact of this
heating on the 21-cm signal is particularly prominent, especially before spin
temperature saturation. We present the largest-volume (349\,Mpc
comoving=244~Mpc) full numerical radiative transfer simulations to date
of this epoch that include the effects of helium and multi-frequency heating,
both with and without X-ray sources. We show that X-ray sources contribute
significantly to early heating of the neutral intergalactic medium and, hence,
to the corresponding 21-cm signal. The inclusion of hard, energetic radiation
yields an earlier, extended transition from absorption to emission compared to
the stellar-only case. The presence of X-ray sources decreases the absolute
value of the mean 21-cm differential brightness temperature. These hard sources
also significantly increase the 21-cm fluctuations compared the common
assumption of temperature saturation. The 21-cm differential brightness
temperature power spectrum is initially boosted on large scales, before
decreasing on all scales. Compared to the case of the cold, unheated
intergalactic medium, the signal has lower rms fluctuations and increased
non-Gaussianity, as measured by the skewness and kurtosis of the 21-cm
probability distribution functions. Images of the 21-cm signal with resolution
around 11~arcmin still show fluctuations well above the expected noise for deep
integrations with the SKA1-Low, indicating that direct imaging of the X-ray
heating epoch could be feasible.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figure
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