Helium reionization and the thermal proximity effect
Avery Meiksin, Eric R. Tittley, Calum K. Brown

TL;DR
This study models the temperature evolution of the intergalactic medium during helium reionization caused by quasars, revealing a thermal proximity effect where temperature varies systematically with distance from the source.
Contribution
It introduces coupled radiative transfer and N-body simulations to analyze the thermal proximity effect during helium reionization in different environments.
Findings
Temperature within the HeIII region exceeds pre-reionization levels.
Temperature increases with distance from the source.
The temperature trend persists until redshift z=2.
Abstract
We examine the temperature structure of the intergalactic medium IGM) surounding a hard radiation source, such as a Quasi-Stellar Object (QSO), as it responds to the onset of helium reionization by the source. We model the reionization using a radiative transfer (RT) code coupled to a particle-mesh (PM) N-body code. Neutral hydrogen and helium are initially ionized by a starburst spectrum, which is allowed to gradually evolve into a power law spectrum (fnu ~ nu^(-0.5)). Multiple simulations were performed with different times for the onset and dominance of the hard spectrum, with onset redshifts ranging from z = 3.5 to 5.5. The source is placed in a high-density region to mimic the expected local environment of a QSO. Simulations with the source placed in a low-density environment were also performed as control cases to explore the role of the environment on the properties of the…
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