arXiv Analytics

Sign in

arXiv:2006.10065 [astro-ph.GA]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources

The contribution of globular clusters to cosmic reionization

Xiangcheng Ma, Eliot Quataert, Andrew Wetzel, Claude-André Faucher-Giguère, Michael Boylan-Kolchin

Published 2020-06-17Version 1

We study the escape fraction of ionizing photons (f_esc) in two cosmological zoom-in simulations of galaxies in the reionization era with halo mass M_halo~10^10 and 10^11 M_sun (stellar mass M*~10^7 and 10^9 M_sun) at z=5 from the Feedback in Realistic Environments project. These simulations explicitly resolve the formation of proto-globular clusters (GCs) self-consistently, where 17-39% of stars form in bound clusters during starbursts. Using post-processing Monte Carlo radiative transfer calculations of ionizing radiation, we compute f_esc from cluster stars and non-cluster stars formed during a starburst over ~100 Myr in each galaxy. We find that the averaged f_esc over the lifetime of a star particle follows a similar distribution for cluster stars and non-cluster stars. Clusters tend to have low f_esc in the first few Myrs, presumably because they form preferentially in more extreme environments with high optical depths; the f_esc increases later as feedback starts to disrupt the natal cloud. On the other hand, non-cluster stars formed between cluster complexes or in the compressed shell at the front of a superbubble can also have high f_esc. We find that cluster stars on average have comparable f_esc to non-cluster stars. This result is robust across several star formation models in our simulations. Our results suggest that the fraction of ionizing photons from proto-GCs to cosmic reionization is comparable to the cluster formation efficiency in high-redshift galaxies and hence proto-GCs likely contribute an appreciable fraction of photons but are not the dominant sources for reionization.

Comments: 10 pages, 7 figures, comments welcome, key results in Table 3 and Figure 3
Categories: astro-ph.GA, astro-ph.CO
Related articles: Most relevant | Search more
arXiv:1510.00507 [astro-ph.GA] (Published 2015-10-02)
Globular clusters and their contribution to the formation of the Galactic halo
arXiv:2001.02233 [astro-ph.GA] (Published 2020-01-07)
Cosmic Reionization On Computers: The Galaxy-Halo Connection between $5 \leq z \leq10$
arXiv:1710.07636 [astro-ph.GA] (Published 2017-10-20)
Cosmic Reionization After Planck and Before JWST: An Analytic Approach