139 research outputs found

    Primordial Galaxy Formation and IGM Reionization

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    In this talk I will present a model for primordial galaxy formation. In particular, I will review the feedback effects that regulate the process: (i) radiative (i.e. ionizing and H_2-photodissociating photons) and (ii) stellar (i.e. SN explosions) feedback produced by massive stars. I will show the results of a model for galaxy formation and IGM reionization, which includes a self-consistent treatment of the above feedback effects. Finally, I will describe a Monte Carlo method for the radiative transfer of ionizing photons through the IGM and discuss its application to the IGM reionization problem.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures. To appear in "A New Era in Cosmology", (ASP Conference Proceedings), eds. T. Shanks and N. Metcalf

    AMADA-Analysis of Multidimensional Astronomical Datasets

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    We present AMADA, an interactive web application to analyse multidimensional datasets. The user uploads a simple ASCII file and AMADA performs a number of exploratory analysis together with contemporary visualizations diagnostics. The package performs a hierarchical clustering in the parameter space, and the user can choose among linear, monotonic or non-linear correlation analysis. AMADA provides a number of clustering visualization diagnostics such as heatmaps, dendrograms, chord diagrams, and graphs. In addition, AMADA has the option to run a standard or robust principal components analysis, displaying the results as polar bar plots. The code is written in R and the web interface was created using the Shiny framework. AMADA source-code is freely available at https://goo.gl/KeSPue, and the shiny-app at http://goo.gl/UTnU7I.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Computin

    Radiative transfer of ionizing radiation through gas and dust: stellar source case

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    We present a new dust extension to the Monte Carlo radiative transfer code crash, which enables it to simulate the propagation of ionizing radiation through mixtures of gas and dust. The new code is applied to study the impact of dust absorption on idealized galactic H II regions and on small scale reionization. We find that H II regions are reduced in size by the presence of dust, while their inner temperature and ionization structure remain largely unaffected. In the small scale reionization simulation, dust hardens ionization fronts and delays the overlap of ionized bubbles. This effect is found to depend only weakly on the assumed abundance of dust in underdense regions.Comment: 17 pages, 14 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRA

    Simulating extremely metal-poor gas and DLA metal content at redshift z=7

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    We present the first theoretical study of metals in damped Ly-alpha (DLA) systems at redshift z=7. The features of cold, primordial gas are studied by means of N-body, hydro, chemistry simulations, including atomic and molecular non-equilibrium chemistry, cooling, star formation for population III and population II-I regimes, stellar evolution, cosmic metal spreading according to proper yields (for He, C, O, Si, Fe, Mg, S, etc.) and lifetimes, and feedback effects. Theoretical expectations are then compared to recently available constraints from DLA observations. We find that DLA galaxies at z=7 account for 10 per cent of the whole galaxy population and for most of the metal-poor galaxies at these epochs. About 7 per cent of these DLA galaxies contain purely pristine material and 34 per cent of them consist of very weakly polluted gas, being, therefore, suitable candidate s as population III sites. The remaining 59 per cent are enriched above ~10^{-4} Zsun. Additionally, DLA candidates appear to have: gas masses <~2x10^8 Msun; very low star formation rate, ~10^{-3} - 10^{-2} Msun/yr (significantly weaker than late-time counterparts); mean molecular fractions covering a fairly wide range, x_mol~10^{-3}- 10^{-6}; typical metallicities Z~3x10^{20} cm^{-2}. They present no or weak correlations between their gas mass and Z, NHI, or x_mol; a moderate correlation between x_mol and Z, linked to the ongoing molecular-driven star formation and metal pollution processes; a mild anti-correlation between NHI and x_mol, due to H depletion into molecules; and a chemical content that is subject to environmental dependencies.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures; MNRAS, in Press - "Rex sedet in vertice caveat ruinam nam sub axe legimus Hecubam reginam

    Clumping factors of HII, HeII and HeIII

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    Estimating the intergalactic medium ionization level of a region needs proper treatment of the reionization process for a large representative volume of the universe. The clumping factor, a parameter which accounts for the effect of recombinations in unresolved, small-scale structures, aids in achieving the required accuracy for the reionization history even in simulations with low spatial resolution. In this paper, we study for the first time the redshift evolution of clumping factors of different ionized species of H and He in a small but very high resolution simulation of the reionization process. We investigate the dependence of the value and redshift evolution of clumping factors on their definition, the ionization level of the gas, the grid resolution, box size and mean dimensionless density of the simulations.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figures, 1 table. Accepted by MNRA

    Counts of high-redshift GRBs as probe of primordial non-Gaussianities

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    We propose to use high-redshift long γ\gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) as cosmological tools to constrain the amount of primordial non-Gaussianity in the density field. By using numerical, N-body, hydrodynamic, chemistry simulations of different cosmological volumes with various Gaussian and non-Gaussian models, we self-consistently relate the cosmic star formation rate density to the corresponding GRB rate. Assuming that GRBs are fair tracers of cosmic star formation, we find that positive local non-Gaussianities, described in terms of the non-linear parameter, \fnl, might boost significantly the GRB rate at high redshift, z≫6z \gg 6. Deviations with respect to the Gaussian case account for a few orders of magnitude if \fnl∼1000\sim 1000, one order of magnitude for \fnl∼100\sim 100, and a factor of ∼2\sim 2 for \fnl∼50\sim 50. These differences are found only at large redshift, while at later times the rates tend to converge. Furthermore, a comparison between our predictions and the observed GRB data at z>6z > 6 allows to exclude large negative \fnl, consistently with previous works. Future detections of any long GRB at extremely high redshift (z∼15−20z\sim 15-20) could favor non-Gaussian scenarios with positive \fnl. More stringent constraints require much larger high-zz GRB complete samples, currently not available in literature. By distinguishing the contributions to the GRB rate from the metal-poor population III regime, and the metal-enriched population II-I regime, we conclude that the latter is a more solid tracer of the underlying matter distribution, while the former is strongly dominated by feedback mechanisms from the first, massive, short-lived stars, rather than by possible non-Gaussian fluctuations. This holds quite independently of the assumed population III initial mass function.Comment: 12 pages; MNRAS in press. Chi ha paura muore tutti i giorn

    Detecting the First Objects in the Mid-IR with NGST

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    We calculate the expected Mid-IR molecular hydrogen line emission from the first objects in the universe. Due to their low masses, the stellar feedback from massive stars is able to blowaway their gas content and collect it into a cooling shell where H_2 rapidly forms and IR roto-vibrational (as for example the restframe 2.12 micron) lines carry away a large fraction (up to 10%) of the explosion energy. The fluxes from these sources are in the range 10^{-21}-10^{-17} erg/s/cm^2. The highest number counts are expected in the 20 micron band, where about 10^5 sources/deg^2 are predicted at the limiting flux of 3 \times 10^{-18} erg/s/cm^2. Among the planned observational facilities, we find that the best detection perspectives are offered by NGST, which should be able to reveal about 200 first objects in one hour observation time at its limiting flux in the above band. Therefore, Mid-IR instruments appear to represent perfect tools to trace star formation and stellar feedback in the high (z>5) redshift universe.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures. Revised version, accepted for publication by MNRA
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