X-ray Preionisation Powered by Accretion on the First Black Holes. I: a Model for the WMAP Polarisation Measurement

Abstract

We investigate the possibility that there is a first phase of partial ionisation due to X-rays produced by black hole accretion in small-mass galaxies at redshifts 7<z<20. This is followed by complete reionisation by stellar sources at z~7. This scenario is motivated by the large optical depth to Thompson scattering, taue=0.17, measured by WMAP. But it is also consistent with the observed Gunn-Peterson trough in the spectra of quasars at z~5-6. We use a semianalytic code to explore models with different black hole accretion histories and cosmological parameters.We find that ``preionisation'' by X-rays can increase the intergalactic medium (IGM) optical depth from taue~0.06 given by stellar sources only, to 0.1<taue<0.2, if a fraction of baryons 5x10-5 is accreted onto seed black holes produced in the collapse of low metallicity, high mass stars before z~15. To be effective, preionisation requires a non-negligible star formation in the first small-mass galaxies in hich seed black holes are formed.The model predicts that dwarf spheroidal galaxies may host a mass in black holes that is 5-40% of their stellar mass. The redshifted X-ray background produced by this early epoch of black hole accretion constitutes about 5-10% of the X-ray background in the 2-50 keV bands and roughtly half of the currently estimated black hole mass density was formed at early times.Moreover, in most models, the photons from the redshifted background are sufficient to fully reionise HeII at redshift z~3 without any additional contribution from quasars at lower redshifts and the temperature of the mean density intergalactic medium remains close to 104 K down to redshift z~1.[abridged]

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