Spatially Extended 21 cm Signal from Strongly Clustered UV and X-Ray Sources in the Early Universe [CEA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/1405.2085


We present our prediction for the local 21 cm differential brightness temperature ($\delta T_{b}$) from a set of strongly clustered sources of Population III (Pop III) and II (Pop II) objects in the early Universe, by a numerical simulation of their formation and radiative feedback. These objects are located inside a highly biased environment, which is a rare, high-density peak (“Rarepeak”) extending to $\sim7$ comoving Mpc. We study the impact of ultraviolet (UV) and X-ray photons on the intergalactic medium (IGM) and the resulting $\delta T_{b}$, when Pop III stars are assumed to emit X-ray photons by forming X-ray binaries after their death. We parameterize the rest-frame spectral energy density (SED) of X-ray photons, which regulates X-ray photon-trapping, IGM-heating, secondary Lyman-alpha pumping and the resulting morphology of $\delta T_{b}$. A combination of emission ($\delta T_{b}>0$) and absorption ($\delta T_{b}<0$) regions appears in varying amplitudes and angular scales. The boost of the signal by the high-density environment ($\delta\sim0.64$) and on a relatively large scale combine to make Rarepeak a discernible, spatially-extended ($\theta\sim10’$) object for 21 cm observation at $13\lesssim z\lesssim17$, which is found to be detectable as a single object by SKA with integration time of $\sim1000$ hours. Power spectrum analysis by some of the SKA precursors (LOFAR, MWA, PAPER) of many such peaks is found difficult due to the rarity of these peaks, although some X-ray models do predict power higher than that from purely linear fluctuations at $k\sim0.3\,{\rm Mpc}^{-1}$.

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K. Ahn, H. Xu, M. Norman, et. al.
Mon, 12 May 14
25/40

Comments: 15 pages, 9 figure. Submitted to ApJ. Comments are welcome. Image quality has been reduced for arXiv posting