Stellar Population Effects on the Inferred Photon Density at Reionization
E. R. Stanway (Warwick), J. J. Eldridge (Auckland), G. D. Becker, (STScI, Cambridge)

TL;DR
This paper investigates how stellar population characteristics, especially binary star evolution, influence the ionizing photon flux during reionization, affecting our understanding of the early universe's ionization history.
Contribution
It quantifies the boost in ionizing flux from synthetic stellar populations including binary evolution and assesses their impact on cosmic reionization models.
Findings
Binary stars increase ionizing flux by 60% at low metallicity.
Predicted photon production rates for galaxies at different metallicities.
Galaxy populations can sustain reionization up to redshift ~9 with modest photon escape fractions.
Abstract
The relationship between stellar populations and the ionizing flux with which they irradiate their surroundings has profound implications for the evolution of the intergalactic medium. We quantify the ionizing flux arising from synthetic stellar populations which incorporate the evolution of interacting binary stars. We determine that these show ionizing flux boosted by 60 per cent at 0.05 < Z < 0.3 Z_sun and a more modest 10-20 per cent at near-Solar metallicities relative to star-forming populations in which stars evolve in isolation. The relation of ionizing flux to observables such as 1500A continuum and ultraviolet spectral slope is sensitive to attributes of the stellar population including age, star formation history and initial mass function. For a galaxy forming 1 M_sun yr^{-1}, observed at > 100 Myr after the onset of star formation, we predict a production rate of photons…
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