The THESAN project: environmental drivers of Local Group reionization
Yu Zhao (1,2), Aaron Smith (3), Rahul Kannan (4), Enrico Garaldi (5), Hui Li (6), Mark Vogelsberger (7), Andrew Benson (2), Lars Hernquist (8) ((1) USC, (2) Carnegie, (3) UT Dallas, (4) York, (5) IPMU, (6) Tsinghua, (7) MIT, (8) Harvard)

TL;DR
This study uses the THESAN simulations to analyze how environmental factors like local overdensity and large-scale structure influence the timing of reionization in Local Group analogues, revealing an inside-out reionization pattern.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the environmental dependence of reionization timing in Local Group analogues using detailed radiation-hydrodynamic simulations.
Findings
Denser regions reionize earlier at fixed mass.
Virgo-like clusters accelerate reionization up to 10 cMpc.
Reionization timing correlates with present-day halo separation.
Abstract
The timing of cosmic reionization across Local Group (LG) analogues provides insights into their early histories and surrounding large-scale structure. Using the radiation-hydrodynamic simulation THESAN-1 and its dark matter-only counterpart THESAN-DARK-1, we track the reionization histories of all haloes, including 224 LG analogues within the proximity of any of the 20 Virgo-like clusters with halo masses above 10^14 Msun at z=0 and their environments. The statistically controlled samples quantify how the reionization redshift (z_reion) correlates with halo mass, local overdensity, and present-day pair properties. Even at fixed mass, haloes in denser regions ionize earlier, and increasing the overdensity smoothing scale systematically suppresses small-scale structure, including local variations and environmental gradients in z_reion. Virgo-like clusters accelerate reionization in their…
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