Population III X-ray binaries and their impact on the early universe
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Sartorio, Nina S.; Fialkov, Anastasia; Hartwig, Tilman; Mirouh, Giovanni Marcello; Izzard, Robert G.; Magg, Mattis; Klessen, Ralf S.; Glover, Simon C. O.; Chen, Li-Hsin; Tarumi, Yuta; Hendriks, David D.Editorial
Oxford University Press
Materia
stars: Population III (cosmology:) diffuse radiation X-rays: binaries (cosmology:) early Universe Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics
Fecha
2023-03-10Referencia bibliográfica
Sartorio, N. S. et al., “Population III X-ray binaries and their impact on the early universe”, Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, vol. 521, no. 3, OUP, pp. 4039–4055, 2023. doi:10.1093/mnras/stad697.
Patrocinador
Institute of Astronomy, University of Cambridge, Madingley Road, Cambridge CB3 0HA, UKResumen
The first population of X-ray binaries (XRBs) is expected to affect the thermal and ionization states of the gas in the early Universe. Although these X-ray sources are predicted to have important implications for high-redshift observable signals, such as the hydrogen 21-cm signal from cosmic dawn and the cosmic X-ray background, their properties are poorly explored, leaving theoretical models largely uninformed. In this paper we model a population of X-ray binaries arising from zero metallicity stars. We explore how their properties depend on the adopted initial mass function (IMF) of primordial stars, finding a strong effect on their number and X-ray production efficiency. We also present scaling relations between XRBs and their X-ray emission with the local star formation rate, which can be used in sub-grid models in numerical simulations to improve the X-ray feedback prescriptions. Specifically, we find that the uniformity and strength of the X-ray feedback in the intergalactic medium is strongly dependant on the IMF. Bottom-heavy IMFs result in a smoother distribution of XRBs, but have a luminosity orders of magnitude lower than more top-heavy IMFs. Top-heavy IMFs lead to more spatially uneven, albeit strong, X-ray emission. An intermediate IMF has a strong X-ray feedback while sustaining an even emission across the intergalactic medium. These differences in X-ray feedback could be probed in the future with measurements of the cosmic dawn 21-cm line of neutral hydrogen, which offers us a new way of constraining population III IMF.





