Uv Radiative Feedback on High–redshift Proto–galaxies
نویسندگان
چکیده
We use three-dimensional hydrodynamic simulations to investigate the effects of a transient photoionizing ultraviolet (UV) flux on the collapse and cooling of pregalactic clouds. These clouds have masses in the range 10 – 10 M⊙, form at high redshifts (z ∼ > 18), and are assumed to lie within the short–lived cosmological HII regions around the first generation of stars. In addition, we study the combined effects of this transient UV flux and a persistent Lyman–Werner (LW) background (at photon energies below 13.6eV) from distant sources. In the absence of a LW background, we find that a critical specific intensity of JUV ∼ 0.1×10 ergs s cm Hz sr demarcates a transition from net negative to positive feedback for the halo population. A weaker UV flux stimulates subsequent star formation inside the fossil HII regions, by enhancing the H2 molecule abundance. A stronger UV flux significantly delays star–formation by reducing the gas density, and increasing the cooling time, at the centers of collapsing halos. At a fixed JUV, the sign of the feedback also depends strongly on the density of the gas at the time of UV illumination. Regardless of the whether the feedback is positive or negative, we find that once the UV flux is turned off, its impact stars to diminish after ∼ 30% of the Hubble time. In the more realistic case when a LW background is present, with JLW ∼ > 0.01× 10 ergs s cm Hz sr, strong suppression persists down to the lowest redshift (z = 18) in our simulations. Finally, we find evidence that heating and photoevaporation by the transient UV flux renders the ∼ 10 M⊙ halos inside fossil HII regions more vulnerable to subsequent H2 photo–dissociation by a LW background. Subject headings: cosmology: theory – early Universe – galaxies: high-redshift – evolution
منابع مشابه
Spectroscopic Identification of a Proto-cluster at Z = 2.300: Environmental Dependence of Galaxy Properties at High Redshift
We have discovered a highly significant over-density of galaxies at z = 2.300± 0.015 in the course of a redshift survey designed to select star-forming galaxies in the redshift range z = 2.3± 0.4 in the field of the bright z = 2.72 QSO HS1700+643. The structure has a redshift-space galaxy over-density of δ g ≃ 7 and an estimated matter over-density in real space of δm ≃ 1.8, indicating that it ...
متن کاملThe ultraviolet colours and dust attenuation of Lyman-break galaxies
Using GALFORM, a semi-analytical model of galaxy formation in the cold dark matter cosmology, we study the rest-frame ultraviolet (UV) colours of Lyman-break galaxies (LBGs) in the redshift range 2.5 ≤ z ≤ 10. As the impact of dust on UV luminosity can be dramatic, our model includes a self-consistent computation of dust attenuation based on a radiative transfer model. We find that intrinsicall...
متن کاملThe Fate of the First Galaxies. Ii. Effects of Radiative Feedback
We use 3D cosmological simulations with radiative transfer to study the formation and evolution of the first galaxies in a ΛCDM cosmology. The simulations include continuum radiative transfer using the “Optically Thin Variable Eddington Tensor” (OTVET) approximation and line-radiative transfer in the H2 Lyman-Werner bands of the UV background radiation. Chemical and thermal processes are treate...
متن کاملObservational signatures of feedback in QSO absorption spectra
Models for the formation of galaxies and clusters of galaxies require strong feedback in order to explain the observed properties of these systems. We investigate whether such feedback has observational consequences for the intergalactic medium, as probed in absorption towards background quasars. A typical quasar sight-line intersects one proto-cluster per unit redshift, and significant feedbac...
متن کاملRelic HII Regions and Radiative Feedback at High-Redshifts
UV radiation from early astrophysical sources could have a large impact on subsequent star formation in nearby protogalaxies, and in general on the progress of cosmological reionization. Theoretical arguments based on the absence of metals in the early Universe suggest that the first stars were likely massive, bright, yet short-lived, with lifetimes of a few million years. Here we study the rad...
متن کاملذخیره در منابع من
با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید
عنوان ژورنال:
دوره شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2006