Feedback-regulated star formation and escape of LyC photons from mini-haloes during reionisation
Taysun Kimm, Harley Katz, Martin Haehnelt, Joakim Rosdahl, Julien, Devriendt, Adrianne Slyz

TL;DR
This study uses advanced simulations to analyze star formation and LyC photon escape in mini-haloes during reionisation, revealing feedback effects, stochastic star formation, and the limited role of mini-haloes in reionisation.
Contribution
It introduces a new thermo-turbulent star formation model and provides detailed insights into LyC escape fractions and feedback effects in mini-haloes during reionisation.
Findings
Feedback suppresses star formation efficiently in mini-haloes.
Escape fractions are higher in mini-haloes than in atomic-cooling haloes.
LyC photons from mini-haloes are minor contributors to reionisation.
Abstract
Reionisation in the early Universe is likely driven by dwarf galaxies. Using cosmological radiation-hydrodynamic simulations, we study star formation and the escape of Lyman continuum (LyC) photons from mini-haloes with . Our simulations include a new thermo-turbulent star formation model, non-equilibrium chemistry, and relevant stellar feedback processes (photoionisation by young massive stars, radiation pressure, and mechanical supernova explosions). We find that feedback reduces star formation very efficiently in mini-haloes, resulting in the stellar mass consistent with the slope and normalisation reported in Kimm \& Cen and the empirical stellar mass-to-halo mass relation derived in the local Universe. Because star formation is stochastic and dominated by a few gas clumps, the escape fraction in mini-haloes is generally determined by radiation…
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