Reionization and Galaxy Formation in Warm Dark Matter Cosmologies
Pratika Dayal, Tirthankar Roy Choudhury, Volker Bromm, Fabio, Pacucci

TL;DR
This study uses a semi-analytic model to compare reionization and galaxy formation in Cold and Warm Dark Matter cosmologies, highlighting how different dark matter properties influence galaxy populations and reionization history.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed semi-analytic framework that accounts for key galaxy formation processes in WDM models and explores how these models can be distinguished from CDM using future observations.
Findings
Reionization ends at similar redshifts (~5.5) across all dark matter models.
Low-mass galaxies dominate reionization in CDM, but are suppressed in WDM, shifting the sources to larger halos.
Current observations cannot distinguish between CDM and WDM models, but future JWST data may help.
Abstract
We compare model results from a semi-analytic (merger-tree based) framework for high-redshift (z ~ 5-20) galaxy formation against reionization indicators, including the Planck electron scattering optical depth and the ionizing photon emissivity, to shed light on the reionization history and sources in Cold (CDM) and Warm Dark Matter (WDM; particle masses of and 5 keV) cosmologies. This model includes all the key processes of star formation, supernova feedback, the merger/accretion/ejection driven evolution of gas and stellar mass and the effect of the ultra-violet background (UVB) in photo-evaporating the gas content of low-mass galaxies. We find that the delay in the start of reionization in light (1.5 keV) WDM models can be compensated by a steeper redshift evolution of the ionizing photon escape fraction and a faster mass assembly, resulting in reionization ending at…
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