The Cosmological Impact of Luminous TeV Blazars II: Rewriting the Thermal History of the Intergalactic Medium
Philip Chang (1,2), Avery E. Broderick (1,3,4), Christoph Pfrommer, (5,1) ((1) Canadian Institute for Theoretical Astrophysics, (2) University of, Wisconsin-Milwaukee, (3) Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics, (4), University of Waterloo

TL;DR
This paper investigates how TeV blazars heat the intergalactic medium through plasma instabilities, significantly altering its thermal history and explaining observed features of the Ly-alpha forest.
Contribution
It introduces a new model of IGM heating by TeV blazars, showing their dominant role at low redshift and impact on the IGM's temperature and equation of state.
Findings
TeV blazar heating dominates low-redshift IGM heating.
Heating increases IGM temperature by nearly an order of magnitude.
Produces an inverted equation of state consistent with Ly-alpha forest observations.
Abstract
The Universe is opaque to extragalactic very high-energy gamma rays (VHEGRs, E>100 GeV) because they annihilate and pair produce on the extragalactic background light. The resulting ultra-relativistic pairs are assumed to lose energy through inverse Compton scattering of CMB photons. In Broderick et al. (2011, Paper I of this three paper series), we argued that instead powerful plasma instabilities in the ultra-relativistic pair beam dissipate the kinetic energy of the TeV-generated pairs locally, heating the intergalactic medium (IGM). Here, we explore the effect of this heating upon the thermal history of the IGM. We collate the observed extragalactic VHEGR sources to determine a local VHEGR heating rate and correct for the pointed nature of VHEGR observations using Fermi observations of high and intermediate peaked BL Lacs. Because the local extragalactic VHEGR flux is dominated by…
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