Effect of molecular hydrogen self-shielding modeling on early Reionization Era galaxies in radiative hydrodynamic cosmological simulations
Thinh Huu Nguyen, Kirk S. S. Barrow, Susie Byrom, and Varun Satish

TL;DR
This study compares a Sobolev-like density-gradient approximation to adaptive ray-tracing for modeling H2 self-shielding in cosmological simulations, revealing significant impacts on galaxy formation and reionization timing.
Contribution
It evaluates the accuracy of a computationally efficient approximation method against a rigorous ray-tracing approach in early universe simulations.
Findings
Approximation yields higher H2 dissociation in low-density regions.
Small halos form less stars with the approximation.
Large halos' properties are less affected by the approximation.
Abstract
Accurately modeling molecular hydrogen () is an important task in cosmological simulations because it regulates star formation. One fundamental property of is the ability to self-shield, a phenomenon in which the in the outer layer of a molecular cloud absorbs the photodissociating Lyman-Werner UV radiation and shields the inner . Historically, numerical approximations have been utilized to avoid intensive ray-tracing calculations. This paper evaluates the use of the Sobolev-like density-gradient approximation in self-shielding modeling and tests its agreement with a more rigorous adaptive ray-tracing method in cosmological simulations. We ran four high-resolution zoom-in cosmological simulations to investigate the models' effects in the early Reionization Era (). We find that the approximation model…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Radio Astronomy Observations and Technology
