SIMBAD references

2014ApJ...794...20O - Astrophys. J., 794, 20 (2014/October-2)

The reionization of galactic satellite populations.

OCVIRK P., GILLET N., AUBERT D., KNEBE A., LIBESKIND N., CHARDIN J., GOTTLOBER S., YEPES G. and HOFFMAN Y.

Abstract (from CDS):

We use high-resolution simulations of the formation of the local group, post-processed by a radiative transfer code for UV photons, to investigate the reionization of the satellite populations of an isolated Milky Way-M31 galaxy pair in a variety of scenarios. We use an improved version of ATON which includes a simple recipe for radiative feedback. In our baseline models, reionization is initiated by low-mass, radiatively regulated halos at high redshift, until more massive halos appear, which then dominate and complete the reionization process. We investigate the relation between reionization history and present-day positions of the satellite population. We find that the average reionization redshift (zr) of satellites is higher near galaxy centers (MW and M31). This is due to the inside out reionization patterns imprinted by massive halos within the progenitor during the epoch of reionization, which end up forming the center of the galaxy. Due to incomplete dynamical mixing during galaxy assembly, these early patterns survive to present day, resulting in a clear radial gradient in the average satellite reionization redshift, up to the virial radius of MW and M31 and beyond. In the lowest emissivity scenario, the outer satellites are reionized about 180 Myr later than the inner satellites. This delay decreases with increasing source model emissivity, or in the case of external reionization by Virgo or M31, because reionization occurs faster overall and becomes spatially quasi-uniform at the highest emissivity.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): cosmology: theory - galaxies: formation - galaxies: high-redshift - intergalactic medium - methods: numerical - radiative transfer

Simbad objects: 5

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