Other
Scientific paper
Dec 2007
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=2007aas...211.9103s&link_type=abstract
American Astronomical Society, AAS Meeting #211, #91.03; Bulletin of the American Astronomical Society, Vol. 39, p.884
Other
Scientific paper
Reionization exerted a strong feedback effect which left its imprint on all scales and on radiation backgrounds at all wavelengths. When the first stars formed inside minihalos of mass 106 solar masses at z > 20, ionizing radiation heated and expelled the gas inside their minihalos and escaped to create intergalactic H II regions. As these H II regions grew, their ionization fronts encountered other minihalos, which blocked their path and trapped them, causing this minihalo gas, too, to escape in a photoevaporative wind. Further star formation inside minihalos was affected not only by these I-fronts, but also by the rising dissociating background. Eventually, hierarchical clustering formed dwarf galaxies > 108 solar masses, where atomic cooling was effective enough to trigger more star formation, and intergalactic H II regions grew and merged to become 10's of comoving Mpc's in size. Inside these H II regions, gas pressure inhibited gravitational collapse, so the minimum mass of newly-formed galaxies jumped above 109 solar masses. Reionization ended when the intergalactic H II regions finally overlapped everywhere. We have studied this process by a variety of techniques, on a hierarchy of mass- and length-scales. The latter span the range from interiors of minihalos, to giant H II regions produced by the clustered formation of galaxies, to large-scale structure of the patchy distribution of neutral and ionized gas during the epoch of reionization. These results lead to predictions of a fluctuating background of redshifted 21-cm line radiation, temperature and polarization anisotropy of the CMB, gaps in the Gunn-Peterson absorption spectra of high-z quasars, and distortion of the luminosity function and spatial clustering of Lyman alpha emission-line galaxies during this epoch, among other things. I will summarize the latest theoretical developments in this talk. This work supported by NASA grants NNX07AH09G and NNG04GI77G and NSF AST-0708176.
Ahn Kyungjin
Alvarez Marcelo
Bond Richard J.
Iliev Ilian T.
McDonald Patrick
No associations
LandOfFree
Observable Signatures of Cosmic Reionization and the End of the Dark Ages does not yet have a rating. At this time, there are no reviews or comments for this scientific paper.
If you have personal experience with Observable Signatures of Cosmic Reionization and the End of the Dark Ages, we encourage you to share that experience with our LandOfFree.com community. Your opinion is very important and Observable Signatures of Cosmic Reionization and the End of the Dark Ages will most certainly appreciate the feedback.
Profile ID: LFWR-SCP-O-1479475