TL;DR
This paper models cosmic reionisation by incorporating physically motivated, non-linear ionisation and inhomogeneous recombination rates, improving predictions of the 21cm signal and source properties.
Contribution
It introduces a new approach to simulate reionisation using mass-dependent ionisation and recombination rates derived from hydrodynamic simulations, enhancing accuracy.
Findings
Superlinear dependence of ionisation rate on halo mass (Rion ~ Mh^1.41).
Inhomogeneous recombinations reduce large-scale 21cm power.
Gas clumping on sub-cell scales has minimal impact on 21cm predictions.
Abstract
We explore the impact of incorporating physically motivated ionisation and recombination rates on the history and topology of cosmic reionisation, by incorporating inputs from small-volume hydrodynamic simulations into a semi-numerical code, SimFast21, that evolves reionisation on large scales. We employ radiative hydrodynamic simulations to parameterize the ionisation rate Rion and recombination rate Rrec as functions of halo mass, overdensity and redshift. We find that Rion is super-linearly dependent on halo mass (Rion ~ Mh^1.41), in contrast to previous assumptions. We implement these scalings into SimFast21 to identify the ionized regions. We tune our models to be consistent with recent observations of the optical depth, ionizing emissivity, and neutral fraction by the end of reionisation. We require an average photon escape fraction fesc=0.04 within ~ 0.5 cMpc cells, independent…
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