Stellar black holes at the dawn of the universe
I.F. Mirabel, M. Dijkstra, P. Laurent, A. Loeb, J.R. Pritchard

TL;DR
This paper proposes that black hole high-mass X-ray binaries significantly contributed to heating and reionizing the early universe's intergalactic medium, influencing galaxy formation and observational cosmology.
Contribution
It introduces the idea that BH-HMXBs played a crucial role in early universe reionization, supplementing stellar UV radiation, based on theoretical models and observations.
Findings
BH-HMXBs produce comparable ionizing photons to their progenitor stars.
X-ray photons from black holes cause secondary ionizations, enhancing ionization efficiency.
BH-HMXBs heat the IGM to ~10^4 K, maintaining large-scale ionization.
Abstract
It is well established that between 380000 and 1 billion years after the Big Bang the Inter Galactic Medium (IGM) underwent a "phase transformation" from cold and fully neutral to warm (~10^4 K) and ionized. Whether this phase transformation was fully driven and completed by photoionization by young hot stars is a question of topical interest in cosmology. AIMS. We propose here that besides the ultraviolet radiation from massive stars, feedback from accreting black holes in high-mass X-ray binaries (BH-HMXBs) was an additional, important source of heating and reionization of the IGM in regions of low gas density at large distances from star-forming galaxies. METHODS. We use current theoretical models on the formation and evolution of primitive massive stars of low metallicity, and the observations of compact stellar remnants in the near and distant universe, to infer that a significant…
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