Escape fraction of ionizing photons from high-redshift galaxies in cosmological SPH simulations
Hidenobu Yajima (Penn State), Jun-Hwan Choi (UNLV), Kentaro Nagamine, (UNLV)

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological SPH simulations combined with radiative transfer calculations to analyze how the escape fraction of ionizing photons varies with galaxy halo mass at high redshifts, revealing significant dependence on mass and gas structure.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the halo mass dependence of ionizing photon escape fractions using detailed simulations and radiative transfer, highlighting the role of gas clumpiness and star cluster positioning.
Findings
Lower mass haloes have higher escape fractions (~0.4) compared to massive ones (~0.07).
Gas clumpiness and star cluster location influence photon escape pathways.
Star-forming galaxies with M_h < 10^10 M_sun significantly contribute to reionization.
Abstract
Combing the three-dimensional radiative transfer (RT) calculation and cosmological SPH simulations, we study the escape fraction of ionizing photons (f_esc) of high-redshift galaxies at z=3-6. Our simulations cover the halo mass range of M_h = 10^9 - 10^12 M_sun. We postprocess several hundred simulated galaxies with the Authentic Radiative Transfer (ART) code to study the halo mass dependence of f_esc. In this paper, we restrict ourselves to the transfer of stellar radiation from local stellar population in each dark matter halo. We find that the average f_esc steeply decreases as the halo mass increases, with a large scatter for the lower mass haloes. The low mass haloes with M_h ~ 10^9 M_sun have large values of f_esc (with an average of ~ 0.4), whereas the massive haloes with M_h ~ 10^11 M_sun show small values of f_esc (with an average of ~ 0.07). This is because in our…
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