The importance of galaxy formation histories in models of reionization
Jordan Mirocha, Paul La Plante, Adrian Liu

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that incorporating detailed galaxy formation histories into reionization models significantly affects predictions for galaxy populations and 21-cm signals, highlighting biases in simpler models and proposing a hybrid modeling approach.
Contribution
It introduces a hybrid modeling method that combines detailed galaxy formation histories for bright halos with unresolved modeling for others, improving large-volume reionization simulations.
Findings
Galaxy luminosity models based solely on halo mass are biased.
Galaxy formation history diversity affects reionization signatures.
Hybrid modeling effectively balances detail and computational efficiency.
Abstract
Upcoming galaxy surveys and 21-cm experiments targeting high redshifts are highly complementary probes of galaxy formation and reionization. However, in order to expedite the large volume simulations relevant for 21-cm observations, many models of galaxies within reionization codes are entirely subgrid and/or rely on halo abundances only. In this work, we explore the extent to which resolving and modeling individual galaxy formation histories affects predictions both for the galaxy populations detectable by upcoming surveys and the signatures of reionization accessible to upcoming 21-cm experiments. We find that a common approach, in which galaxy luminosity is assumed to be a function of halo mass only, is biased with respect to models in which galaxy properties are evolved through time via semi-analytic modeling and thus reflective of the diversity of assembly histories…
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