We show the universe was reionized twice, first at z~15-16 and second at z~6. Such an outcome appears inevitable, when normalizing to two well determined observational measurements, namely, the epoch of the final cosmological reionization at z~6 and the density fluctuations at z~6, which in turn are tight ly constrained by Lyman alpha forest observations at z~3. These two observations most importantly fix the product of star formation efficiency and ionizing photon escape fraction from galaxies at high redshift. To the extent that the relative star formation efficiencies in gaseous minihalos with H2 cooling and large halos with atomic cooling at high redshift are still unknown, the primary source for the first reionization could be Pop III stars either in minihalos or in large halos. We show that gas in minihalos can be cooled efficiently by H2 molecules and star formation can continue to take place largely unimpeded throughout the first reionization period, thanks to two new mechanisms for generating a high X-ray background during the Pop III era, put forth here. Moreover, an important process for producing a large number of H2 molecules in relic HII regions of Pop III galaxies, first pointed out by Ricotti, Gnedin, & Shull, is quantified here. It is shown that the Lyman-Werner background may never build up during the Pop III era. The long cosmological reionization and reheating history is complex. We discuss a wide range of implications and possible tests for this new reionization picture. In particular, Thomson scattering optical depth is increased to 0.10 +- 0.03, compared to 0.027 for the case of only one rapid reionization at z=6. Upcoming Microwave Anisotropy Probe observation of the polarization of the cosmic microwave background should be able to distinguish between these two scenarios.
CITATION STYLE
Cen, R. (2003). The Universe Was Reionized Twice. The Astrophysical Journal, 591(1), 12–37. https://doi.org/10.1086/375217
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