Dependence of the Local Reionization History on Halo Mass and Environment: Did Virgo Reionize the Local Group?
Simone M. Weinmann (1), Andrea V. Maccio'(2), Ilian T. Iliev (3),, Garrelt Mellema (4), Ben Moore (1) ((1) University of Zurich, (2) MPIA, (3), CITA, (4) Stockholm Observatory)

TL;DR
This study investigates how the reionization timing of galaxies depends on their mass and environment, using simulations to distinguish internal and external reionization processes, with implications for galaxy formation models.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of reionization dependence on halo mass and environment, including a fit for reionization redshift as a function of halo mass, based on large-scale simulations.
Findings
Reionization probability depends on cosmology, photon production efficiency, and halo mass.
A rapid transition occurs at ~10^12 Msun from external to internal reionization.
No correlation found between reionization history and galaxy environment.
Abstract
The reionization of the Universe has profound effects on the way galaxies form and on their observed properties at later times. Of particular importance is the relative timing of the reionization history of a region and its halo assembly history, which can affect the nature of the first stars formed in that region, the properties and radial distribution of its stellar halo, globular cluster population and its satellite galaxies. We distinguish two basic cases for the reionization of a halo - internal reionization, whereby the stars forming in situ reionize their host galaxy, and external reionization, whereby the progenitor of a galaxy is reionized by external radiation before its own stars are able to form in sufficient numbers. We use a set of large-scale radiative transfer and structure formation simulations, based on cosmologies derived from both WMAP 1-year and WMAP 3-year data, to…
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