20,383 research outputs found
Quasar H II Regions During Cosmic Reionization
Cosmic reionization progresses as HII regions form around sources of ionizing
radiation. Their average size grows continuously until they percolate and
complete reionization. We demonstrate how this typical growth can be calculated
around the largest, biased sources of UV emission, such as quasars, by further
developing an analytical model based on the excursion set formalism. This
approach allows us to calculate the sizes and growth of the HII regions created
by the progenitors of any dark matter halo of given mass and redshift with a
minimum of free parameters. Statistical variations in the size of these
pre-existing HII regions are an additional source of uncertainty in the
determination of very high redshift quasar properties from their observed HII
region sizes. We use this model to demonstrate that the transmission gaps seen
in very high redshift quasars can be understood from the radiation of only
their progenitors and associated clustered small galaxies. The fit sets a lower
limit on the redshift of overlap at z = 5.8 +/- 0.1. This interpretation makes
the transmission gaps independent of the age of the quasars observed. If this
interpretation were correct it would raise the prospects of using radio
interferometers currently under construction to detect the epoch of
reionization.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, accepted by MNRAS, revised to match published
versio
Towards the quantification of the semantic information encoded in written language
Written language is a complex communication signal capable of conveying
information encoded in the form of ordered sequences of words. Beyond the local
order ruled by grammar, semantic and thematic structures affect long-range
patterns in word usage. Here, we show that a direct application of information
theory quantifies the relationship between the statistical distribution of
words and the semantic content of the text. We show that there is a
characteristic scale, roughly around a few thousand words, which establishes
the typical size of the most informative segments in written language.
Moreover, we find that the words whose contributions to the overall information
is larger, are the ones more closely associated with the main subjects and
topics of the text. This scenario can be explained by a model of word usage
that assumes that words are distributed along the text in domains of a
characteristic size where their frequency is higher than elsewhere. Our
conclusions are based on the analysis of a large database of written language,
diverse in subjects and styles, and thus are likely to be applicable to general
language sequences encoding complex information.Comment: 19 pages, 4 figure
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