What does the first highly-redshifted 21-cm detection tell us about early galaxies?
Jordan Mirocha, Steven R. Furlanetto

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the EDGES 21-cm detection at high redshift, showing it challenges existing galaxy formation models unless early star formation was more efficient or the faint galaxy population was steeper, with implications for future observations.
Contribution
It demonstrates that current galaxy formation models cannot reproduce the EDGES signal without assuming rapid evolution or increased efficiency of early star formation.
Findings
Standard UV luminosity functions cannot produce the narrow absorption at z~18.
Early star formation must be more efficient or the faint-end slope steeper at high redshift.
A radio background explanation requires galaxies to emit 1-2 GHz photons with much higher efficiency.
Abstract
The Experiment to Detect the Global Epoch of Reionization Signature (EDGES) recently reported a strong 21-cm absorption signal relative to the cosmic microwave background at . While its anomalous amplitude may indicate new physics, in this work we focus on the timing of the signal, as it alone provides an important constraint on galaxy formation models. Whereas rest-frame ultraviolet luminosity functions (UVLFs) over a broad range of redshifts are well fit by simple models in which galaxy star formation histories track the assembly of dark matter halos, we find that these same models, with reasonable assumptions about X-ray production in star-forming galaxies, cannot generate a narrow absorption trough at . If verified, the EDGES signal therefore requires the fundamental inputs of galaxy formation models to evolve rapidly at . Unless extremely faint…
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