UV Radiative Feedback on High-Redshift Proto-Galaxies
Abstract
We use three-dimensional hydrodynamic simulations to investigate the effects of a transient photoionizing ultraviolet (UV) flux on the collapse and cooling of pregalactic clouds. These clouds have masses in the range 105 -107 Msun, form at high redshifts (z>18), are assumed to lie within the short-lived cosmological HII regions around the first generation of stars. In addition, we study the combined effects of this transient UV flux and a persistent Lyman-Werner (LW) background from distant sources. In the absence of a LW background, we find that a critical specific intensity of JUV ~ 0.1 x 10-21 ergs s-1 cm-2 Hz-1 sr-1 demarcates a transition from net negative to positive feedback for the halo population. A weaker UV flux stimulates subsequent star formation inside the fossil HII regions, by enhancing the H2 molecule abundance. A stronger UV flux significantly delays star-formation by reducing the gas density, and increasing the cooling time, at the centers of collapsing halos. At a fixed JUV, the sign of the feedback also depends strongly on the density of the gas at the time of UV illumination. Regardless of the whether the feedback is positive or negative, we find that once the UV flux is turned off, its impact stars to diminish after ~30% of the Hubble time. In the more realistic case when a LW background is present, with JLW > 0.01 x 10-21 ergs s-1 cm-2 Hz-1 sr-1, strong suppression persists down to the lowest redshift (z=18) in our simulations. Finally, we find evidence that heating and photoevaporation by the transient UV flux renders the ~106 Msun halos inside fossil HII regions more vulnerable to subsequent H2 photo-dissociation by a LW background.
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