Formation, disruption and energy output of Population III X-ray binaries
Taeho Ryu (Stony Brook), Takamitsu L. Tanaka (Stony Brook/NYU),, Rosalba Perna (Stony Brook)

TL;DR
This study uses simulations to estimate the formation rate and X-ray emission of Population III high-mass X-ray binaries, revealing their significant role in early universe heating and 21 cm signal imprint.
Contribution
It provides the first estimates of Pop III HMXB formation rates and X-ray luminosity based on N-body simulations, improving understanding of their impact on cosmic evolution.
Findings
HMXBs form at about one per 10,000 solar masses of stars
Early HMXBs emit roughly 100 times more X-ray power per star formation rate than lower-redshift galaxies
Results imply early HMXBs significantly heated the intergalactic medium
Abstract
The first astrophysical objects shaped the cosmic environment by reionizing and heating the intergalactic medium (IGM). In particular, X-rays are very efficient at heating the IGM before it became completely ionized, an effect that can be measured through the 21 cm line of neutral hydrogen. High-mass X-ray binaries (HMXBs), known to be prolific X-ray sources in star-forming galaxies at lower redshifts, are prime candidates for driving the thermal evolution of the IGM at redshifts . Despite their importance, the formation efficiency of HMXBs from the first stellar populations is not well understood---as such, their collective X-ray emission and the subsequent imprint on the 21 cm signature are usually evaluated using free parameters. Using -body simulations, we estimate the rate of HMXB formation via mutual gravitational interactions of nascent, small groups of the first stars…
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