Kavli Affiliate: Mark Vogelsberger
| First 5 Authors: Oliver Zier, Oliver Zier, , ,
| Summary:
We investigate the impact of ionizing external ultraviolet (UV) radiation on
low-mass haloes ($M_h<10^10M_odot$) at high redshift using $1140M_odot$
baryonic resolution zoom-in simulations of seven regions from the THESAN-ZOOM
project. We compare three simulation sets that differ in the treatment of
external UV radiation: one employing a uniform UV background initiated at
z=10.6 in addition to radiation transport for local sources, another with the
same background starting at z=5.5, and the default configuration in which the
large-scale radiation field from the parent THESAN-1 simulation box acts as a
boundary condition. The multi-phase interstellar medium (ISM) model, combined
with its high mass resolution, allows us to resolve all star-forming haloes and
capture the back-reaction of ionizing radiation on galaxy properties during the
epoch of reionization. When present, external UV radiation efficiently unbinds
gas in haloes with masses below $10^9M_odot$ and suppresses subsequent star
formation. As a result, in simulations with early reionization, minihaloes fail
to form stars from pristine gas, leading to reduced metal enrichment of gas
later accreted by more massive haloes. Consequently, haloes with masses below
$10^10M_odot$ at all simulated epochs (z>3) exhibit lower metallicities and
altered metallicity distributions. The more accurate and realistic shielding
from external UV radiation, achieved through self-consistent radiative
transfer, permits the existence of a cold but low-density gas phase down to
z=3. These findings highlight the importance of capturing a patchy reionization
history in high-resolution simulations targeting high-redshift galaxy
formation. We conclude that at minimum, a semi-numerical model that
incorporates spatially inhomogeneous reionization and a non-uniform metallicity
floor is necessary to accurately emulate metal enrichment in minihaloes.
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