The Stellar Initial Mass Function at the Epoch of Reionization
Ranga-Ram Chary

TL;DR
This paper estimates the luminosity density at z~6, infers constraints on the stellar initial mass function and reionization timeline, suggesting a brief reionization process completed before z<7 and specific IMF slopes needed for ionization from higher redshifts.
Contribution
It provides new constraints on the stellar initial mass function and reionization history based on luminosity density estimates at z~6.
Findings
Reionization likely completed before z<7.
IMF slope must be steeper than -1.65 for reionization from z>9.
Stellar mass density at z~6 is approximately 1.3×10^7 Msun/Mpc^3.
Abstract
I provide estimates of the ultraviolet and visible light luminosity density at z~6 after accounting for the contribution from faint galaxies below the detection limit of deep Hubble and Spitzer surveys. I find the rest-frame V-band luminosity density is a factor of ~2-3 below the ultraviolet luminosity density at z~6. This implies that the maximal age of the stellar population at z~6, for a Salpeter initial mass function, and a single, passively evolving burst, must be <100 Myr. If the stars in z~6 galaxies are remnants of the star-formation that was responsible for ionizing the intergalactic medium, reionization must have been a brief process that was completed at z<7. This assumes the most current estimates of the clumping factor and escape fraction and a Salpeter slope extending up to 200 M_{\sun} for the stellar initial mass function (IMF; dN/dM \propto M^{\alpha}, \alpha=-2.3).…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
