The evolution of the helium-ionizing background at z ~ 2-3
Keri L. Dixon, Steven R. Furlanetto

TL;DR
This paper models the evolution of the helium-ionizing background at redshifts 2-3, revealing a potential reionization epoch around z ~ 2.7 through semi-analytic methods and analysis of observational data.
Contribution
It introduces a semi-analytic model incorporating inhomogeneous radiation backgrounds to better understand helium reionization and its observational signatures.
Findings
A uniform background underestimates the photoionization rate by up to a factor of 2.
A discontinuity in optical depth near z=2.8 suggests helium reionization effects.
Reionization ending around z ~ 2.7 best fits the observational data.
Abstract
Recent observations suggest that helium became fully ionized around redshift z ~ 3. The HeII optical depth derived from the Lyman-alpha forest decreases substantially from this period to z ~ 2; moreover, it fluctuates strongly near z ~ 3 and then evolves smoothly at lower redshifts. From these opacities, we compute, using a semi-analytic model, the evolution of the mean photoionization rate and the attenuation length for helium over the redshift range 2.0 < z < 3.2. This model includes an inhomogeneous metagalactic radiation background, which is expected during and after helium reionization. We find that assuming a uniform background underestimates the required photoionization rate by up to a factor ~2. When averaged over the (few) available lines of sight, the effective optical depth exhibits a discontinuity near z = 2.8, but the measurement uncertainties are sizable. This feature…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
