Exploring reionisation and high-z galaxy observables with recent multi-redshift MWA upper limits on the 21-cm signal
Bradley Greig, Cathryn M. Trott, Nichole Barry, Simon J., Mutch, Bart Pindor, Rachel L. Webster, J. Stuart B. Wyithe

TL;DR
This study uses recent MWA 21-cm signal upper limits across multiple redshifts to constrain models of cosmic reionisation, providing new limits on high-redshift galaxy X-ray emissivity and IGM temperature, and showing most models are already inconsistent with existing observations.
Contribution
It introduces the first constraints on high-redshift galaxy X-ray emissivity and refines limits on IGM temperature using MWA data, connecting these to reionisation models and existing observations.
Findings
Most models disfavoured by MWA data are inconsistent with other observations.
Established lower limits on galaxy X-ray emissivity at high redshift.
Derived upper limits on IGM spin temperature at multiple redshifts.
Abstract
We use the latest multi-redshift () upper limits on the 21-cm signal from the Murchison Widefield Array (MWA) to explore astrophysical models which are inconsistent with the data. These upper limits are achieved using 298 h of carefully excised data over four observing seasons. To explore these upper limits in the context of reionisation astrophysics, we use 21CMMC. We then connect the disfavoured regions of parameter space to existing observational constraints on reionisation such as high- galaxy ultra-violet (UV) luminosity functions, background UV photoionisation rate, intergalactic medium (IGM) neutral fraction, the electron scattering optical depth and the soft-band X-ray emissivity. We find the vast majority of models disfavoured by the MWA limits are already inconsistent with existing observational constraints. These inconsistent models arise from two classes of…
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