Impact of the turnover in the high-z galaxy luminosity function on the 21-cm signal during Cosmic Dawn and Epoch of Reionization
Zekang Zhang, Huanyuan Shan, Junhua Gu, Qian Zheng, Yidong Xu, Bin, Yue, Yuchen Liu, Zhenghao Zhu, Quan Guo

TL;DR
This paper investigates how a potential turnover in the high-redshift galaxy luminosity function affects the 21-cm signal during Cosmic Dawn and Epoch of Reionization, revealing significant impacts on the signal's features and detectability.
Contribution
It introduces a model incorporating a turnover in the galaxy luminosity function and analyzes its effects on the 21-cm signal, providing new insights into early star formation and reionization physics.
Findings
Turnover in the UV luminosity function dampens star formation in small haloes.
The 21-cm absorption trough shifts to higher frequencies with turnover.
Star formation in faint galaxies influences the 21-cm power spectrum, detectable by SKA.
Abstract
The shape of the faint-end of the high-z galaxy luminosity function (LF) informs early star formation and reionization physics during the Cosmic Dawn and Epoch of Reionization. Until recently, based on the strong gravitational lensing cluster deep surveys, the Hubble Frontier Fields (HFF) has found a potential turnover in the ultraviolet (UV) LF at z6. In this paper, we analyze the contribution of extremely faint galaxies with the magnitude larger than the turnover magnitude in LF to cosmic reionization. We apply the measurement from HFF to our suppressed star formation efficiency model, including three free parameters: halo mass threshold , curvature parameter and a UV conversion factor . According to our fit of 68\% confidence level, the high-redshift star formation in haloes smaller than is found to…
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