Evaluating the QSO contribution to the 21-cm signal from the Cosmic Dawn
Hannah E. Ross, Keri L. Dixon, Raghunath Ghara, Ilian T. Iliev,, Garrelt Mellema

TL;DR
This study uses advanced simulations to assess how quasars influence the 21-cm signal during the Cosmic Dawn, revealing their significant impact on signal fluctuations and non-Gaussianity, which could aid future observations with SKA.
Contribution
The paper introduces new large-volume radiative transfer simulations including QSO-like sources, analyzing their effects on the 21-cm signal during Cosmic Dawn.
Findings
QSOs modestly contribute to heating but significantly affect the 21-cm power spectrum.
Imaging of the 21-cm signal with SKA1-Low resolution is feasible across models.
QSOs increase non-Gaussianity, which could serve as a signature of rare X-ray sources.
Abstract
The upcoming radio interferometer Square Kilometre Array (SKA) is expected to directly detect the redshifted 21-cm signal from the neutral hydrogen present during the Cosmic Dawn. Temperature fluctuations from X-ray heating of the neutral intergalactic medium can dominate the fluctuations in the 21-cm signal from this time. This heating depends on the abundance, clustering, and properties of the X-ray sources present, which remain highly uncertain. We present a suite of three new large-volume, 349\,Mpc a side, fully numerical radiative transfer simulations including QSO-like sources, extending the work previously presented in Ross et al. (2017). The results show that our QSOs have a modest contribution to the heating budget, yet significantly impact the 21-cm signal. Initially, the power spectrum is boosted on large scales by heating from the biased QSO-like sources, before decreasing…
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