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27 April 2024
 
  » arxiv » astro-ph/0209326

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Effects of a Soft X-ray Background on Structure Formation at High Redshift
Marie M. Machacek ; Greg L. Bryan ; Tom Abel ;
Date 17 Sep 2002
Journal Mon.Not.Roy.Astron.Soc. 338 (2003) 273
Subject astro-ph
AffiliationCfA), Greg L. Bryan (Oxford), Tom Abel (Penn
AbstractWe use three dimensional hydrodynamic simulations to investigate the effects of a soft X-ray background, that could have been produced by an early generation of mini-quasars, on the subsequent cooling and collapse of high redshift pregalactic clouds. The simulations use an Eulerian adaptive mesh refinement technique with initial conditions drawn from a flat Lambda-dominated cold dark matter model cosmology to follow the nonequilibrium chemistry of nine chemical species in the presence of both a soft ultraviolet Lyman-Werner H_2 photodissociating flux and a soft X-ray background extending to 7.2 keV. Although we vary the normalization of the X-ray background by two orders of magnitude, the positive feedback effect of the X-rays on cooling and collapse of the pregalactic cloud expected due to the increased electron fraction is quite mild, only weakly affecting the mass threshold for collapse and the fraction of gas within the cloud that is able to cool. Inside most of the cloud we find that H_2 is in photodissociation equilibrium with the soft UV flux. The net buildup of the electron density needed to enhance H_2 formation occurs too slowly compared to the H_2 photodissociation and dynamical timescales within the cloud to overcome the negative impact of the soft UV photodissociating flux on cloud collapse. However, we find that even in the most extreme cases the first objects to form do rely on molecular hydrogen as coolant and stress that our results do not justify the neglect of these objects in models of galaxy formation.
Source arXiv, astro-ph/0209326
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