Radiative Transfer Effect on Ultraviolet Pumping of the 21cm Line in the High Redshift Universe
Abstract
During the epoch of reionization the 21cm signal is sensitive to the scattering rate of the ultraviolet photons, redshifting across the Lymanalpha resonance. Here we calculate the photon scattering rate profile for a single ultraviolet source. After taking into account previously neglected natural broadening of the resonance line, we find that photons approach the resonance frequency and experience most scatterings at a significantly smaller distance from the source than naively expected r=(dnu/nu0)(c/H), where dnu=nu-nu0 is the initial frequency offset, and the discrepancy increases as the initial frequency offset decreases. As a consequence, the scattering rate P(r) drops much faster with increasing distance than the previously assumed 1/r2 profile. Near the source (r<1Mpc comoving), the scattering rate of photons that redshift into the Lyalpha resonance converges to P(r) r-7/3. The scattering rate of Lyalpha photons produced by splitting of photons that redshift into a higher resonance (Lygamma, Lydelta, etc.) is only weakly affected by the radiative transfer, while the sum of scattering rates of Lyalpha photons produced from all higher resonances also converges to P(r) r-7/3 near the source. At 15<z<35, on scales of ~0.01-20Mpc/h (comoving), the total scattering rate of Lyalpha photons from all Lyman resonances is found to be higher by a factor of ~1+0.3[(1+z)/20]2/3 than obtained without full radiative transfer. Consequently, during the early stage of reionization, the differential brightness of 21cm signal against the cosmic microwave background is also boosted by a similar factor.
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