Radiation Backgrounds at Cosmic Dawn: X-Rays from Compact Binaries
Piero Madau, Tassos Fragos

TL;DR
This study models the X-ray background from binaries during cosmic dawn, finding their contribution to IGM ionization is minimal, but they influence heating and 21-cm signals at later epochs.
Contribution
It provides detailed predictions of X-ray emissivity and background radiation during reionization, incorporating population synthesis and IGM filtering effects.
Findings
X-ray binaries contribute negligibly to IGM ionization.
HeI photoionization dominates IGM heating.
Neutral hydrogen becomes observable in 21-cm emission only at z<10.
Abstract
We compute the expected X-ray diffuse background and radiative feedback on the intergalactic medium (IGM) from X-ray binaries prior and during the epoch of reionization. The cosmic evolution of compact binaries is followed using a population synthesis technique that treats separately neutron stars and black hole binaries in different spectral states and is calibrated to reproduce the observed X-ray properties of galaxies at z<4. Together with an updated empirical determination of the cosmic history of star formation, recent modeling of the stellar mass-metallicity relation, and a scheme for absorption by the IGM that accounts for the presence of ionized HII bubbles during the epoch of reionization, our detailed calculations provide refined predictions of the X-ray volume emissivity and filtered radiation background from "normal" galaxies at z>6. Radiative transfer effects modulate the…
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