Re-ionizing the Universe without Stars
Michael A. Dopita (1)(2)(3), Lawrence M. Krauss (1)(4), Ralph S., Sutherland (1), Chiaki Kobayashi (1), Charles H. Lineweaver (1) ((1), Australian National University, (2) King Abdulaziz University, (3) University, of Hawaii (4) Arizona State University)

TL;DR
This paper proposes that fast accretion shocks around massive dark matter halos could have supplied enough ionizing photons to re-ionize the universe by redshift 7-8, supplementing the insufficient star formation rates.
Contribution
It models the physics of accretion shocks and demonstrates their potential role as a significant source of re-ionization photons in the early universe.
Findings
50% of the universe's volume ionized by z~7-8
Re-ionization completed by z~5.8 without stars
Uncertainty in re-ionization redshift less than ±0.5
Abstract
Recent observations show that the measured rates of star formation in the early universe are insufficient to produce re-ionization, and therefore, another source of ionizing photons is required. In this \emph{Letter}, we examine the possibility that these can be supplied by the fast accretion shocks formed around the cores of the most massive haloes () on spatial scales of order 1 kpc. We model the detailed physics of these fast accretion shocks, and apply these to a simple 1-D spherical hydrodynamic accretion model for baryonic infall in dark matter halos with an Einasto density distribution. The escape of UV photons from these halos is delayed by the time taken to reach the critical accretion shock velocity for escape of UV photons; 220 km s, and by the time it takes for these photons to ionize the surrounding baryonic matter in the accretion flow.…
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