Dissecting Reionisation with the Cosmic Star Formation and Active Galactic Nuclei Luminosity History
Jordan C. J. D'Silva, Simon P. Driver, Claudia D. P. Lagos, Aaron S. G. Robotham, Nathan J. Adams, Christopher J. Conselice, Brenda Frye, Nimish P. Hathi, Thomas Harvey, Anton M. Koekemoer, Rafael Ortiz III, Massimo Ricotti, Clayton Robertson, Ross M. Silver, Stephen M. Wilkins

TL;DR
This study investigates the roles of stars and active galactic nuclei in cosmic reionisation by analyzing their luminosity histories and ionising photon contributions, using models constrained by JWST data.
Contribution
It provides a combined model of stellar and AGN contributions to reionisation, estimating escape fractions and demonstrating their joint sufficiency for reionising the universe by redshift 6.
Findings
Stars could reionise the universe by z≈6 with moderate escape fractions.
AGN alone are insufficient to produce enough ionising photons.
A hybrid model with both sources matches reionisation requirements.
Abstract
The combination of the cosmic star formation history and active galactic nuclei (AGN) luminosity history as inferred by the James Webb Space Telescope is connected to the cosmic spectral energy distribution (CSED) to explore the sources of reionisation. We compute the redshift evolution of the corresponding cosmic ionising photon emissivity, the neutral fraction and the cosmic microwave background optical depth. We use the generative SED modelling code ProSpect to bracket the ionising emissivity between escape fractions of for both the stars and AGN. Stars alone could have achieved reionisation by with for solar metallicity () stars or for metal-poor () stars. On the other hand, AGN by themselves would have struggled to produce sufficiently many…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
