The Global 21-cm Signal in the Context of the High-z Galaxy Luminosity Function
Jordan Mirocha, Steven R. Furlanetto, G. Sun

TL;DR
This paper presents a new model for the global 21-cm signal that is calibrated to galaxy luminosity functions and CMB measurements, suggesting reionization and reheating occurred mainly below redshift 12, with implications for early galaxy formation and heating sources.
Contribution
The study introduces a globally calibrated 21-cm signal model that accounts for recent galaxy luminosity function data and CMB optical depth, differing from past models by predicting a later absorption peak and minimal emission.
Findings
The 21-cm absorption peaks at 110 MHz with -160 mK depth.
Reionization and reheating likely occur at z < 12.
Strong emission signals indicate additional heating sources beyond HMXBs.
Abstract
Motivated by recent progress in studies of the high- Universe, we build a new model for the global 21-cm signal that is explicitly calibrated to measurements of the galaxy luminosity function (LF) and further tuned to match the Thomson scattering optical depth of the cosmic microwave background, . Assuming that the galaxy population can be smoothly extrapolated to higher redshifts, the recent decline in best-fit values of and the inefficient heating induced by X-ray binaries (HMXBs; the presumptive sources of the X-ray background at high-) imply that the entirety of cosmic reionization and reheating occurs at redshifts . In contrast to past global 21-cm models, whose ( MHz) absorption features and strong mK emission features were driven largely by the assumption of efficient early star-formation and…
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