Measurements of the Thermal and Ionization State of the Intergalactic Medium during the Cosmic Afternoon
Abstract
We perform the first measurement of the thermal and ionization state of the intergalactic medium (IGM) across 0.9 < z < 1.5 using 301 absorption lines fitted from 12 HST STIS quasar spectra, with a total pathlength of z=2.1. We employ the machine-learning-based inference method that uses joint b-N distributions obtained from decomposition. Our results show that the HI photoionization rates, , are in good agreement with the recent UV background synthesis models, with (/s-1)=-11.790.18-0.15, -11.980.09-0.09, and -12.320.10-0.12 at z=1.4, 1.2, and 1 respectively. We obtain the IGM temperature at the mean density, T0, and the adiabatic index, γ, as [ (T0/K), γ]= [4.13+0.12-0.10, 1.34+0.10-0.15], [3.79+0.11-0.11, 1.70+0.09-0.09] and [4.12+0.15-0.25, 1.34+0.21-0.26] at z=1.4, 1.2 and 1 respectively. Our measurements of T0 at z=1.4 and 1.2 are consistent with the expected trend from z<3 temperature measurements as well as theoretical expectations that, in the absence of any non-standard heating, the IGM should cool down after HeII reionization. Whereas, our T0 measurements at z=1 show unexpectedly high IGM temperature. However, because of the relatively large uncertainty in these measurements of the order of T0~5000 K, mostly emanating from the limited redshift path length of available data in these bins, we can not definitively conclude whether the IGM cools down at z<1.5. Lastly, we generate a mock dataset to test the constraining power of future measurement with larger datasets. The results demonstrate that, with redshift pathlength z 2 for each redshift bin, three times the current dataset, we can constrain the T0 of IGM within 1500K. Such precision would be sufficient to conclusively constrain the history of IGM thermal evolution at z < 1.5.
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