The Thermal Proximity Effect: A New Probe of He II Reionization History and the Quasar Lifetime
Ilya S. Khrykin, Joseph F. Hennawi, Matthew McQuinn

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel method using the thermal proximity effect observed in the Lyα forest to constrain the timing, duration, and properties of He II reionization and quasar lifetimes.
Contribution
The authors develop a new approach combining simulations and Bayesian analysis to measure He II reionization parameters from the thermal proximity effect in quasar spectra.
Findings
Temperature boost of ~10^4 K depends on initial He II ionization state.
Size of thermal proximity zone correlates with quasar lifetime (~100 cMpc for 10^8 yr).
Method can achieve ~0.04 precision on initial He II fraction and ~0.1 dex on quasar lifetime.
Abstract
Despite decades of effort, the timing and duration of He II reionization, as well as its morphology and the properties of the quasars believed to drive it, are still not well constrained. In this paper we present a new method to study both He II reionization and quasars via the thermal proximity effect -- the photoelectric heating of the intergalactic medium around quasars when their hard radiation doubly ionizes helium. We post-process a SPH simulation with 1D radiative calculations, and study how the thermal proximity effect depends on the amount of singly ionized helium, , which prevailed in the IGM before the quasar turned on, and the characteristic lifetime for which quasars shine. We find that the amplitude of the temperature boost in the quasar environment depends on , with a characteristic value of for…
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