The contribution from stars stripped in binaries to cosmic reionization of hydrogen and helium
Y. Gotberg, S.E. de Mink, M. McQuinn, E. Zapartas, J.H. Groh, C., Norman

TL;DR
This paper shows that stripped stars from binary systems significantly contributed to cosmic reionization, especially by increasing the hardness of ionizing radiation and affecting the intergalactic medium, with implications for cosmological models.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed predictions of ionizing spectra from stripped stars and quantifies their role in hydrogen and helium reionization.
Findings
Stripped stars contributed tens of percent of reionization photons.
They harden the ionizing spectrum, increasing the spectral index to -1.
Combined with massive stars, they dominate helium ionization at high redshift.
Abstract
Massive stars are often found in binary systems and it has been argued that binary products boost the ionizing radiation of stellar populations. Accurate predictions for binary products are needed to understand and quantify their contribution to Cosmic Reionization. We investigate the contribution of stars stripped in binaries since (1) they are, arguably, the best-understood products of binary evolution, (2) we recently produced the first non-LTE radiative transfer calculations for the atmospheres of these stripped stars that predict their ionizing spectra, and (3) they are very promising sources since they boost the ionizing emission of stellar populations at late times. This allows stellar feedback to clear the surroundings such that a higher fraction of their photons can escape and ionize the intergalactic medium. Combining our detailed predictions for the ionizing spectra with…
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