Cosmic Reionization after Planck: Could Quasars Do It All?
Piero Madau, Francesco Haardt

TL;DR
This paper explores a model where high-redshift quasars and AGNs alone reionize the universe, aligning with recent Planck data and observational constraints, suggesting AGNs could be the primary drivers of cosmic reionization.
Contribution
It proposes an AGN-dominated reionization scenario consistent with Planck measurements and observational data, challenging the need for early star-forming galaxies in reionization.
Findings
Hydrogen reionized by z=5.7 in the model.
Helium doubly reionized before z=4.
AGN contribution explains X-ray background and optical depth measurements.
Abstract
We assess a model of late cosmic reionization in which the ionizing background radiation arises entirely from high redshift quasars and other active galactic nuclei (AGNs). The low optical depth to Thomson scattering reported by the Planck Collaboration pushes the redshift of instantaneous reionization down to z=8.8^{+1.7}_{-1.4} and greatly reduces the need for significant Lyman-continuum emission at very early times. We show that, if recent claims of a numerous population of faint AGNs at z=4-6 are upheld, and the high inferred AGN comoving emissivity at these epochs persists to higher, z~10, redshifts, then active galaxies may drive the reionization of hydrogen and helium with little contribution from normal star-forming galaxies. We discuss an AGN-dominated scenario that satisfies a number of observational constraints: the HI photoionization rate is relatively flat over the range…
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