27 research outputs found

    A new measurement of the intergalactic temperature at z∼2.55 − 2.95

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    We present two measurements of the temperature-density relationship (TDR) of the intergalactic medium (IGM) in the redshift range 2.55 < z < 2.95 using a sample of 13 high-quality quasar spectra and high resolution numerical simulations of the IGM. Our approach is based on fitting the neutral hydrogen column density NHI and the Doppler parameter b of the absorption lines in the Lyα forest. The first measurement is obtained using a novel Bayesian scheme which takes into account the statistical correlations between the parameters characterising the lower cut-off of the b − NHI distribution and the power-law parameters T0 and γ describing the TDR. This approach yields T0/103 K = 15.6 ± 4.4 and γ = 1.45 ± 0.17 independent of the assumed pressure smoothing of the small scale density field. In order to explore the information contained in the overall b − NHI distribution rather than only the lower cut-off, we obtain a second measurement based on a similar Bayesian analysis of the median Doppler parameter for separate column-density ranges of the absorbers. In this case we obtain T0/103 K = 14.6 ± 3.7 and γ = 1.37 ± 0.17 in good agreement with the first measurement. Our Bayesian analysis reveals strong anti-correlations between the inferred T0 and γ for both methods as well as an anti-correlation of the inferred T0 and the pressure smoothing length for the second method, suggesting that the measurement accuracy can in the latter case be substantially increased if independent constraints on the smoothing are obtained. Our results are in good agreement with other recent measurements of the thermal state of the IGM probing similar (over-)density ranges

    Radiative Decay of a Long-Lived Particle and Big-Bang Nucleosynthesis

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    The effects of radiatively decaying, long-lived particles on big-bang nucleosynthesis (BBN) are discussed. If high-energy photons are emitted after BBN, they may change the abundances of the light elements through photodissociation processes, which may result in a significant discrepancy between the BBN theory and observation. We calculate the abundances of the light elements, including the effects of photodissociation induced by a radiatively decaying particle, but neglecting the hadronic branching ratio. Using these calculated abundances, we derive a constraint on such particles by comparing our theoretical results with observations. Taking into account the recent controversies regarding the observations of the light-element abundances, we derive constraints for various combinations of the measurements. We also discuss several models which predict such radiatively decaying particles, and we derive constraints on such models.Comment: Published version in Phys. Rev. D. Typos in figure captions correcte

    Assessing Big-Bang Nucleosynthesis

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    Systematic uncertainties in the light-element abundances and their evolution make a rigorous statistical assessment difficult. However, using Bayesian methods we show that the following statement is robust: the predicted and measured abundances are consistent with 95\% credibility only if the baryon-to-photon ratio is between 2×10−102\times 10^{-10} and 6.5×10−106.5\times 10^{-10} and the number of light neutrino species is less than 3.9. Our analysis suggests that the 4^4He abundance may have been systematically underestimated.Comment: 7 pages, LaTeX(2.09), 6 postscript figures (attached). A postscript version with figures can be found at ftp://astro.uchicago.edu/pub/astro/copi/assessing_BBN . (See the README file for details

    Non-Voigt Lyα\alpha Absorption Line Profiles

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    Recent numerical simulations have lead to a paradigm shift in our understanding of the intergalactic medium, and the loss of a physical justification for Voigt profile fitting of the Lyman-alpha forest. Many individual lines seen in simulated spectra have significant departures from the Voigt profile, yet could be well fitted by a blend of two or more such lines. We discuss the expected effect on the line profiles due to ongoing gravitational structure formation and Hubble expansion. We develop a method to detect departures from Voigt profiles of the absorption lines in a statistical way and apply this method to simulated Lyman-alpha forest spectra, confirming that the profiles seen do statistically differ from Voigt profiles.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJL. 10 pages, 3 figure

    High-redshift QSO absorbing clouds and the background ionizing source

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    High-redshift QSO absorbing clouds and the background ionizing source

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    Wetensch. publicatieFaculteit der Wiskunde en Natuurwetenschappe

    H alpha Emission Lines in High-Redshift Quasars: Erratum

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    H-alpha emission lines in high-redshift quasars

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    peer-reviewedInfrared spectra have been obtained of the H-alpha lines in 18 medium- to high-redshift QSOs and optical spectra taken nearly simultaneously to measure the strong UV line. It is found that the H-alpha line is redshifted by an average of 1000 km/s with respect to the lines from high ionization species such as C IV. Low ionization lines from ions like O I and Mg II are shifted by similar, or slightly smaller, amounts with respect to the high ionization lines. These results are difficult to reconcile with any simple models currently available, including those where dust obscuration is solely responsible for the observed velocity shifts. The similarity between the velocities of H-alpha and Mg II, O I provides some support for models in which the Balmer lines are produced predominantly in a warm H I region, while the Lyman lines arise mainly in a population of optically thin clouds. A velocity separation between the two cloud populations, along with some obscuration, could explain the main features

    Temperature fluctuations in the intergalactic medium

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    The temperature of the low-density intergalactic medium is set by the balance between adiabatic cooling resulting from the expansion of the universe, and photo-heating by the UV-background. We have analysed the Lyman-alpha forest of eleven high-resolution quasar spectra using wavelets, and find strong evidence of a marked jump in the temperature at the mean density, T_0, of 60 per cent around a redshift z=3.3, which we attribute to reionization of HeliumII. The jump can be seen in all three of our spectra that straddle redshift 3.3, at a significance of 99 per cent. Below z=3.1, our results are consistent with a smooth cooling down of the universe, as expected when adiabatic expansion dominates over photo-heating by a UV-background from QSOs and galaxies. We find no evidence of thermal fluctuations on scales greater than 5000 km/s larger than 50 per cent, which could be detected by our method, suggesting that the IGM follows a reasonably well-defined temperature-density relation. We demonstrate that the mean wavelet amplitude scales inversely with T_0 and calibrate the relation with hydrodynamical simulations. We find T_0= 12000K at z>3.6. Such high temperature suggest that Hydrogen reionization occured relatively recent.Comment: 17 pages, minor changes, MNRAS published versio
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