How does radiative feedback from a UV background impact reionization?
Emanuele Sobacchi, Andrei Mesinger

TL;DR
This paper investigates how UV background radiation influences cosmic reionization, finding that its effects are modest and unlikely to self-regulate reionization significantly, especially when considering realistic galaxy formation models.
Contribution
The study provides a physically-motivated analytic expression for the minimum mass of star-forming galaxies affected by UVB feedback, improving reionization modeling accuracy.
Findings
UVB feedback delays reionization by less than 0.5 in redshift.
It results in more uniform, smaller-scale HII regions.
The global photoionization rate is suppressed by less than a factor of 2.
Abstract
An ionizing UV background (UVB) inhibits gas accretion and photo-evaporates gas from the shallow potential wells of small, dwarf galaxies. During cosmological reionization, this effect can result in negative feedback: suppressing star-formation inside HII regions, thus impeding their continued growth. It is difficult to model this process, given the enormous range of scales involved. We tackle this problem using a tiered approach: combining parameterized results from single-halo collapse simulations with large-scale models of reionization. In the resulting reionization models, the ionizing emissivity of galaxies depends on the local values of the reionization redshift and the UVB intensity. We present a physically-motivated analytic expression for the average minimum mass of star-forming galaxies, which can be readily used in modeling galaxy formation. We find that UVB feedback: (i)…
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