ETHOS – an effective theory of structure formation: predictions for the high-redshift Universe – abundance of galaxies and reionization

© 2018 The Author(s) Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society. We contrast predictions for the high-redshift galaxy population and reionization history between cold dark matter (CDM) and an alternative self-interacting dark matter model based on the recently d...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lovell, Mark R, Zavala, Jesús, Vogelsberger, Mark, Shen, Xuejian, Cyr-Racine, Francis-Yan, Pfrommer, Christoph, Sigurdson, Kris, Boylan-Kolchin, Michael, Pillepich, Annalisa
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Oxford University Press (OUP) 2021
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/132527
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Summary:© 2018 The Author(s) Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society. We contrast predictions for the high-redshift galaxy population and reionization history between cold dark matter (CDM) and an alternative self-interacting dark matter model based on the recently developed ETHOS framework that alleviates the small-scale CDM challenges within the Local Group.We perform the highest resolution hydrodynamical cosmological simulations (a 36 Mpc3 volume with gas cell mass of ~105M⊙ and minimum gas softening of ~180 pc) within ETHOS to date - plus a CDM counterpart - to quantify the abundance of galaxies at high redshift and their impact on reionization. We find that ETHOS predicts galaxies with higher ultraviolet (UV) luminosities than their CDM counterparts and a faster build-up of the faint end of the UV luminosity function. These effects, however, make the optical depth to reionization less sensitive to the power spectrum cut-off: the ETHOS model differs from the CDM τ value by only 10 per cent and is consistent with Planck limits if the effective escape fraction of UV photons is 0.1-0.5. We conclude that current observations of high-redshift luminosity functions cannot differentiate between ETHOS and CDM models, but deep James Webb Space Telescope surveys of strongly lensed, inherently faint galaxies have the potential to test non-CDM models that offer attractive solutions to CDM's Local Group problems.