Galaxy Properties and UV Escape Fractions During Epoch of Reionization: Results from the Renaissance Simulations
Hao Xu, John H. Wise, Michael L. Norman, Kyungjin Ahn, and Brian W., O'Shea

TL;DR
This study uses large-scale Renaissance Simulations to analyze properties of early galaxies, focusing on star formation and ionizing photon escape fractions, revealing small galaxies' significant role in cosmic reionization.
Contribution
It provides detailed insights into star formation and UV escape fractions across different halo masses and environments during reionization, based on unprecedented simulation data.
Findings
Halos as small as 10^7 Msun can form stars due to metal-line cooling.
Escape fractions increase with decreasing halo mass, reaching 40-60% at 10^7 Msun.
Galaxy-halo occupation drops significantly below 10^8.5 Msun.
Abstract
Cosmic reionization is thought to be primarily fueled by the first generations of galaxies. We examine their stellar and gaseous properties, focusing on the star formation rates and the escape of ionizing photons, as a function of halo mass, redshift, and environment using the full suite of the {\it Renaissance Simulations} with an eye to provide better inputs to global reionization simulations. This suite, carried out with the adaptive mesh refinement code Enzo, is unprecedented in terms of their size and physical ingredients. The simulations probe overdense, average, and underdense regions of the universe of several hundred comoving Mpc, each yielding a sample of over 3,000 halos in the mass range at their final redshifts of 15, 12.5, and 8, respectively. In the process, we simulate the effects of radiative and supernova feedback from 5,000 to 10,000…
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