On the relative Contribution of high-redshift Galaxies and Active Galactic Nuclei to Reionization
Abstract
In this paper we discuss the contribution of different astrophysical sources to the ionization of neutral hydrogen at different redshifts. We critically revise the arguments in favour/against a substantial contribution of Active Galactic Nuclei (AGNs) and/or Lyman Break Galaxies (LBGs) to the reionization of the Universe at z>5. We consider extrapolations of the high-z QSO and LBG luminosity functions and their redshift evolution as well as indirect constraints on the space density of lower luminosity Active Galactic Nuclei based on the galaxy stellar mass function. Since the hypothesis of a reionization due to LBGs alone requires a significant contribution of faint dwarf galaxies and a LyC photon escape fraction (fesc) of the order of ~20%, in tension with present observational constraints, we examine under which hypothesis AGNs and LBGs may provide a combined relevant contribution to the reionization. We show that a relatively steep faint-end of the AGN luminosity function, consistent with present constraints, provides a relevant (although sub-dominant) contribution, thus allowing us to recover the required ionizing photon rates with fesc~5% up to z~7. At higher redshifts, we test the case for a luminosity-dependent fesc scenario and we conclude that, if the observed LBGs are indeed characterized by very low fesc, values of the order of fesc~70% are needed for objects below our detection threshold, for this galaxy population to provide a substantial contribution to reionization. Clearly, the study of the properties of faint sources (both AGNs and LBGs) is crucial.
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