1.INTRODUCTION
Unveiling the end of the epoch of reionization (EoR) and the sources that complete the budget of ionizing photons is currently a key topic in Astronomy. The phase transition of neutral hydrogen (HI) into its ionized state (HII) is caused by the radiation released by the first stars , the second generation of stars (POP III, Abel et al. 2002; Bromm et al. 2002; Yoshida et al. 2003), and quasars . Other candidates are proposed, such as miniquasars, with masses around 103-6MʘDijkstra et al. 2004; Hassan et al. 2018). Other candidates are proposed, such as miniquasars, with masses around 103-6Mʘ (Mortlock et al. 2011; Bolton et al. 2011; Smith et al. 2017),decaying or self-annihilating dark matter particles or decaying cosmic strings. Nonetheless, the latter objects seem to be unlikely to ionize the Universe by themselves.
Understanding the EoR is intimately tied to the evolution of the ultraviolet background (UVB): the grand sum of all photons that have escaped from quasars and galaxies. Its spectral energy distribution is reasonably well determined at z < 5 (Bolton et al. 2005) and modelled (Haardt et al. 2001) used a cosmological 1D radiative transfer model that follows the propagation of H and He Lyman continuum radiation in a clumpy ionized intergalactic medium (IGM), and uses mean free path and hydrogen photoionization rate decreasing with redshift 1. However, as z ≥ 6 is approached, the population of UV sources is not well determined (Haardt et al. 1999). The uncertainty in estimating the UV photon emissivity from each type of object is caused by the lack of knowledge on the star formation rate, clumping factor and UV escape fraction (Cooke et al. 2014) at the redshift of interest, which are strongly model-dependent. Measuring Lyman series absorption or UV emissivity in a spectrum blueward of Lyα at 1216 Å is rendered almost impossible by the increasing density of matter and neutral hydrogen fraction at redshifts greater than 5.5.
On the other hand, the assumption of a uniform UV radiation field breaks down close to and during the EoR, when the interaction of the ionizing sources with the IGM requires a very accurate description (Lidz et al. 2006). A real-time reionization simulation should first ionize high density regions and fill some regions before others, leading to a multiphase IGM with spatial fluctuations (Lidz et al. 2016).
Alternatively, intervening metal absorption lines detected in the spectra of high redshift quasars offer a completely different method to calibrate the UVB at high redshift. A growing number of absorption systems has been detected (Bosman et al. 2017; Codoreanu et al. 2018; Meyer et al. 2019; Becker et al. 2019) and with the advent of bigger telescopes (e.g. GMT), the expectation is that the sample of absorption lines detected will significantly increase.
An increase in the sample of absorption lines (of at least an order of magnitude compared to the current observational sample) is possible with numerical simulations. A number of works have directed their efforts to describing the evolution of metal absorption lines in the intergalactic and circumgalactic medium (CGM). These simulations take into account different feedback prescriptions, photoionization modelling and variations in the UV ionizing background in the high redshift Universe (Oppenheimer et al. 2006, 2009; Tescari et al. 2011; Cen et al. 2011; Finlator et al. 2013; Pallottini et al. 2014; Keating et al. 2014; Finlator et al. 2015; Rahmati et al. 2016; Keating et al. 2016; García et al. 2017b; Doughty et al. 2018, 2019). The methods employed in each of these works, as well as the set-up of the hydrodynamical simulations, show advantages for the description of the IGM.
However, the result of (García et al. 2017b) with a uniform UV background (Haardt et al. 2012) show that the calculated column densities of the low ionization states (CII, SiII, OI) in the simulations have difficulty matching the values observed by Becker et al (2011). The lack of spatial resolution on the scale of the low ionization absorbers evidences that further work needs to be done to reach a better description of the environment of these absorbers. Nonetheless, the uncertainties on the assumed UVB at high z suggest that varying its normalization could alleviate the discrepancy between simulated results and the current observations. Works from Finlator et al. (2015, 2016); Doughty et al. (2018) also show that alternative models to the UVB can reduce the gap between the observables associated to metal lines calculated with their simulations and the observations. Their models account for simulated UVB with contribution from galaxies + quasars and quasar-only.
The triply ionized state of silicon (SiIV) offers a unique avenue of investigation. Although it is classified as a high ionization state, its ionization potential energy is significantly lower than CIV; it does not necessarily lie in the same environment and it exhibits the same physical conditions as CIV. Detections at high redshift of this ion have been made by Songaila et al. (2001, 2005); D'Odorico et al. (2013), Boksenberg et al. (2015), and more recently by Codoreanu et al. (2018). The latter authors identify 7 systems across a redshift path of 16.4 over the redshift range 4.92 < z < 6.13. They are ≈ 50% complete down to a column density of log Nsys (cm-2) of 12.50. This limiting column density allows them to study the identified SiIV population across the column density range [12.5, 14.0] over the full redshift path of their survey. In addition, Codoreanu et al. (2018) show that the fiducial configuration in García et al. (2017b) at z = 5.6 is compatible with the SiIV observations.
On the other hand, the self-shielding (SSh) of HI gas in very high density regions
(above 1017 cm-2) is also a component that needs to be refined
in the description, specifically when HI statistics are made. Current studies
implement the self-shielding prescription proposed by Chardin et al. (2018), but unfortunately, this is only valid up
to z = 5. At redshifts when reionization is concluding, this treatment is no longer
valid. A new scheme has recently proposed by Rahmati
et al. (2013a), using radiative transfer calculations to find the best
fitting parameters from the functional form of the photoionization rate
This paper, in particular, builds on previous findings of García et al. (2017b). The aim of this work is to explore and discuss to a first approximation variations in the assumed UVB and the HI self-shielding prescriptions.
The paper is presented as follows: § 2 describes the simulations and the method used to post-process them. In § 3 we explore two variations to the uniform assumed in García et al. (2017b). Additionally, we propose an alternative method to compare the current observations with the synthetic sample of metal absorbers, in contrast with previous works that compare two or more ions at once. § 4 shows results for HI statistics when two different HI self-shielding prescriptions are implemented in post-process. Finally, § 5 summarizes the findings of this paper and explores the limitations encountered.
2. The Numerical Simulations and Post-Process
The results presented in this work are a follow-up to García et al. (2017b), and are based on the simulations and the methodology presented in that paper. The suite of numerical simulations uses a customized version of GADGET-3 (Springel 2005): P-GADGET3(XXL). The model was first tested in the context of the Angus project. In Tescari et al. (2014) and Katsianis et al. (2015); Katsianis et al. (2016, 2017), the authors showed that their simulations were compatible with observations of the cosmic star formation rate density and the galaxy stellar mass function at 1 < z < 7. The model takes into account the following physical processes: a multiphase star formation criterion; self-consistent stellar evolution and chemical enrichment modeling; supernova (SN) momentum- and energy-driven galactic winds; AGN feedback, metal-line cooling; low-temperature cooling by molecules and metals (Maio et al. 2007, 2015). Moreover, the model is supported by: a parallel Friends-of-Friends FoF) algorithm to identify collapsed structures, and a parallel SUBFIND algorithm to identify substructures within FoF halos.
The numerical model self-consistently follows the evolution of hydrogen, helium and 9 metal elements (C, Ca, O, N, Ne, Mg, S, Si and Fe) released from supernovae (SNIa and SNII) and low and intermediate mass stars. The chemical evolution scheme is based on the stochastic star formation model implemented in the simulations (Tornatore et al. 2007). It accounts for the age of stars of different mass; hence, the amount of metals released over time varies with the mass of the stars.
The lifetime function from for stars with mass m is adopted. The stellar yields quantify the amount of different metals which is released during the evolution of the stellar population, as follows: (i) SNIa: Thielemann et al. (2003); (ii) SNII (massive stars): Woosley & Weaver (1995); (iii) low and intermediate mass (AGB) stars: van den Hoek & Groenewegen. As one of the main contributors to the reionization of the Universe is the POP III stars (a very massive and short-life population), they are best described by a Chabrier (2003) initial mass function (IMF).
Galactic scale winds were introduced in simulations by Springel & Hernquist
(2003)to regulate the star formation, spread metals from the galaxies and
high-density regions to the IGM and shock-heated gas, and prevent the overcooling of
gas. The phenomenological model for energy-driven wind feedback is presented in
Springel & Hernquist (2003). It
assumes that the mass-loss rate associated with the winds, Mw, is
proportional to the star formation rate
However, Puchwein et al. (2013) suggest that
the the mass carried by the wind is not necessarily proportional to the SFR of the
galaxy. In such case, it would be more natural to assume that there is a relation
between the momentum flux (instead of the energy flux) of the wind and the SFR of
the galaxy, thus η is proportional to the inverse of the wind velocity v
w
, such that
Chemical pollution caused by star formation contributes to the cooling of gas. Some metal line cooling efficiencies peak at T ≈ 104 K (mostly low ionization transitions, Gnat & Ferland 2012). These transitions are privileged in metal-poor high-density environments, as DLAs, where H is mostly neutral or in its molecular form. As discussed in Maio et al. (2007), molecular and low temperature metal cooling is particularly important when collapsed structures reach temperatures T < 104K due to the formation of molecules. At this temperature, atomic cooling is not efficient and is highly suppressed, yet, molecular H continues to cool the gas.
The assumed cosmology is a flat
Column 1: Run name. Column 2: Box size. Column 3: Plummer-equivalent comoving gravitational softening length. Column 4: Feedback model. Column 5: Inclusion of low-temperature metal and molecular cooling (Maio et al. 2007, 2015). The first run, Ch 18 512 MDW, is the fiducial model. The second one, Ch 18 512 MDW mol, has exactly the same configuration as the reference run, but includes low-T metal and molecular cooling.
The numerical simulations are post-processed to recreate the observations of high
redshift quasars and recover synthetic spectra for each ion along each sightline.
The pipeline derived for this purpose relies on the physical conditions of the gas
(reproduced with the hydrodynamical simulations), on top of a uniform field
radiation that accounts for the cosmic microwave background (CMB) and the
ultraviolet/X-ray background from quasars and galaxies HM12 (Haard et al. 2012). The photoionization modeling for the metal
transitions is computed with v8.1 (Ferland et al.
2013) for optically thin gas. In addition, a HI self-shielding
prescription is imposed to the simulations to account for neutral hydrogen inside
high-density regions where gas is optically thick. We choose a thousand random lines
of sight along to the three perpendicular directions inside the box, and in each one
of these sightlines we calculate a simulated spectrum, containing relevant physical
information: HI flux/optical depth, density and temperature of the gas, and the
number density of all the ions considered in the analysis, among other quantities.
The box size
Ion i | λ(Å) | f | El→+1(eV) | Log Z( 𝑍 ⨀ ) |
HI | 1215.67 | 0.4164 | 13.6 | 0 |
CII | 1334.53 | 0.1278 | 24.38 | -3:57 |
CIV | 1548.21 | 0.1899 | 64.49 | .-3:57 |
SiII | 1526.71 | 0.1330 | 16.35 | -4:49 |
SiIV | 1393.76 | 0.513 | 45.14 | -4:49 |
OI | 1302.17 | 0.0480 | 13.62 | -3:31 |
The first column contains the ions, the second one the rest-frame wavelength λ of the transition with the highest oscillator strength. The third column, the oscillator strength f of each absorption line; the fourth shows the ionization energy E associated to each state, and the fifth column, the metal abundance log Z (in solar units), taken from Asplund et al. (2009).
Note: The energy E shown in the fourth column is the energy required to reach the next ionization state i + 1 from the state i.
3.Variations of the UVB in Post-Process
Investigations carried out with a uniform UV background (Haard et al. 2012) in showed that the calculated column densities of the low ionization states (CII, SiII, OI) and their corresponding observables (comoving mass density, column density distribution function, etc.) leave room for improvement when compared with observations. There is general agreement that current simulations do not have enough resolution on the scale of the absorbers with low ionization energies. However, uncertainties in the high-z UVB suggest that varying its normalization is a first step towards a better agreement with the observations at high redshift.
Here we explore the sensitivity of the results presented in to the presence of different ultraviolet/X-ray ionizing backgrounds by modifying the normalization factor at 1 Ryd of the uniform UVB in post-process. Preliminary work allows us to conclude that decreasing the UVB intensity at z = 6 is equivalent to imposing an ionizing background at times earlier than redshift 6. Therefore, low ionization ions would prevail in the early stages of the epoch of reionization. Hence, reductions of more than one order of magnitude in the UVB are very aggressive for high ionization species and, simultaneously, lead to an overproduction of the low ionization ones. Consequently, a variation of 1 dex below the fiducial emissivity in HM12 is conservative but offers a non-negligible imprint on the calculated ions.
Variations of the UVB spectrum (quasars+galaxies model) from the original (see Figure 1) require modified input files to run new tables.
The procedure followed here is explained in § 2 and it has been tuned and applied in , with some small adjustments: the normalization parameter at 1 Ryd is reduced by an order of magnitude below the fiducial value in at all redshifts. This leads to a softer UVB. Hereafter, the test is refered as log Jv -1 (see § 3.1.).
3.1.Change in the Normalization of HM12
It is a reasonable expectation that the presence of a softer UVB input than the uniform in the photoionization model would favor low ionization states and more neutral states would show large incidence rates. In order to test this hypothesis, the UV emissivity Jv at 1 Ryd is reduced by one dex compared with the value defined by the uniform at all redshifts. This leads to a softer UVB.
In order to avoid introducing more variables to this test, the box size has been fixed to 18 Mpc/h. The simulations used to recover the observables are Ch 18 512 MDW, Ch 18 512 MDW mol and Ch 18 512 EDW. The convergence and resolution tests are not included in this document, but they can be found in García et al. (2017b).
The first comparison with observations explored here is the CIV column density distribution function (CDDF), defined in equation 1 as follows:
Here,
At z = 4.8 and 5.6, the CCDFs are compared with observations from and in Figures 2 and 3, respectively. At z = 6.4, the simulated values of the CDDF are compared with upper limits from in Figure 4.
The key feature of Figures 2, 3, 4 is that all of them show a notable underproduction of the CIV absorbers at all redshifts when the emissivity is decreased. The calculated CDDFs are always below the observed values, and for high column densities, there is a clear departure from the fitting functions provided by D´Odorico et al. (2013). Nonetheless, the synthetic CDDFs show a closer match with the observational values from Codoreanu et al. (2018), in particular at high column densities. It is worth noting that Bosman et al. (2017) data are just upper limits for the CIV-CDDF at 6.2 < z < 7.0. Nevertheless, the computed values in this test are significantly underrepresented.
There is a change in the number of CIV absorbers when the UVB emissivity is lower than the original HM12. This result gives a hint in regard to the number of the CIV absorbers: the test log Jv - 1 is too aggressive, with high ionization states of C lying in the IGM.
Next, we compute the cosmological mass density ΩCIV. The cosmological mass density of an ion is defined as:
With mion the mass of the ionic species, nlov the number of
lines of view, pcrit the critical density today, and
Figure 5 shows a comparison of the calculated CIV cosmological mass density at 4 < z < 8 for synthetic absorbers in the range 13.8 < (log NCIV/cm-2) < 15.0 and observations by Pettini et al. (2003) and Ryan-Weber et al. (2009) as orange circles, Codoreanu et al. (2018) as yellow circles, Songaila et al. (2001, 2005) as cyan triangles, Meyer et al. (2019) as magenta triangles, Simcoe et al. (2011) as dark green inverted triangles, D'Odorico et al. (2013) as pink squares, Boksenberg et al. (2015) as a grey diamond, upper limits from Bosman et al. (2017) as a purple star and Díaz et al. (2016) as black pentagons
As a consequence of the discrepancy presented in Figures 2, 3 and 4, the CIV cosmological mass density in the right hand panel of Figure 5 is at least an order of magnitude below the reference case on the left panel, because the number of absorbers in the range 13.8 < log NCIV(cm-2) < 15.0 is underproduced by the simulations in the framework of the modified UVB. The most remarkable difference is visible in the reference run Ch 18 512 MDW, with an order of magnitude shift between the blue curve (on the left) and the light blue one (on the right).
Therefore, strong variations of the UVB around 1 Ryd (specifically, normalization changes in the wavelength range where the transition occurs) seem to have a large impact on the number of CIV absorbers at all redshifts. Figures 6 and 7 draw a comparison of the evolution of CII and CIV in the redshift range 4 < z < 8, with the original (on the left panel) and the test log Jv -1 (on the right). As discussed above, the cosmological mass density of CIV is underrepresented. However, the resulting mass density of CII significantly improves with a softer UVB, indicating that the hypothesis made to perform this test is well-motivated. Effectively, the number of large column density CII absorbers increases and the right panels of Figures 6 and 7 are now compatible with the limits measured by and the most recent estimates made by Cooper et al. (2019).
The feedback prescription does not play a major role in the evolution of CII in this redshift range, while the molecular cooling run Ch 18 512 MDW mol shows a relatively good agreement with the observational data.
Due to the different orders of magnitude between the calculated mass densities of CII and CIV, the right panels of Figures 6 and 7 show no crossover of the low and high ionization states of carbon. A natural conclusion from this could be that decreasing the intensity of the UV background leads to an improvement in the low ionization states at the expense of a poor calculation of CIV absorbers, which are traditionally well constrained by observations.
As pointed out before, CIV is not well represented by this variation of the UVB, but there is a good improvement in the column densities of CII. However, it is difficult to draw definitive conclusions from the column density relationships, because the number of absorbers depends strongly on the ion, with less CIV synthetic absorbers in the case of log Jv -1 . We suggest variations in the UVB smaller than the original HM12 emissivity, but not below an order of magnitude, so as to preserve the improvements in the low-ionization states while keeping positive results in CIV.
4. Variation of the assumed HI self-shielding prescription
A final test that can be done with our simulations is a variation of the HI self-shielding prescription. García et al. (2017b) briefly discuss the need for low ionization states self-shielding (SSh) treatment. However, here we try to quantify the impact of a HI self-shielding prescription different from the extensively used one by Rahmati et al. (2013a) with the HM12 model. For this purpose, we use the new HI SSh model described by Chardin et al. (2018). Their best fitting parameters as a function of redshift were obtained with radiative transfer simulations (calibrated with Lyα forest data after the EoR). One of the merits of these models is that they focused on redshifts corresponding to reionization. Instead, the Rahmati et al. (2013a) HI SSh prescription is valid up to z = 5,which constitutes a limitation when applying this formulation in our models, as commented in García et al. (2017b). Here we compare results for the metal ions with the HI SSh treatments by Rahmati et al. (2013a) and Chardin et al. (2018) -hereafter R13 and C17, respectively-.
The evolution of the photoinization rate
where
The best fitting parameters of equation 3 as a function of redshift found by R13 and C17 are shown in Table 3.
Model | z | n0 (cm-3) | α1 | α2 | β | f |
R13 | 1-5 | 1.003±0.005 nH,SSh | -2.28±0.31 | -0.84±0.11 | 1.64±0.19 | 0.02±0.0089 |
4.0 | 0:009346 | -0:950010 | - 1:503310 | 5:873852 | 0:015308 | |
5.0 | 0:010379 | -1:294665 | - 1:602099 | 5:056422 | 0:024356 | |
C17 | 6.0 | 0:006955 | - 0:941372 | - 1:507124 | 6:109438 | 0:028830 |
7.0 | 0:002658 | - 0:866887 | - 1:272957 | 7:077863 | 0:040894 | |
8.0 | 0:003974 | - 0:742237 | - 1:397100 | 7:119987 | 0:041213 |
The free parameters correspond to equation (3) from RT calculations derived by Rahmati et al. (2013a), R13, and Chardin et al. (2018), C17. The term nH,SSh corresponds to the self-shielding density threshold.
In contrast to the outcome for the metal ions studied in the previous section, one would expect that HI would be more sensitive to a variation of the self-shielding prescription adopted for this transition. In fact, works by and self-consistently calculate the distribution of neutral hydrogen with RT codes, based on the number density of hydrogen. We compute the following observables for HI: the column density distribution function (CDDF) fHI, the HI cosmological mass density ΩHI, and the mass density associated to DLA systems ΩDLA.
In Figure 8 is shown the HI-CDDF at z = 4, comparing the two self-shielding prescriptions (R13 and C17) and simulations with different molecular cooling contents, Ch 18 512 MDW and Ch 18 512 MDW mol. In addition, we compare our theoretical predictions with observational detections of HI-CDDF at z around 4 in two regimes: the range of column densities 12 < log NHI (cm-2) < 22 in the left panel, and a zoom around the DLAs region, 20.3 < log NHI (cm-2) < 22 , in the right panel. In the first case, observations by are plotted in grey, in black, in orange, and in purple. Instead, in the DLA zoom, a comparison is drawn with the fitting function proposed by for DLA systems at redshift 4.0-5.5.
One can see a difference between the two self-shielding prescription implemented at z = 4. The Chardin et al. (2018) model predicts a larger amount of neutral hydrogen hosted in systems in the Lyman-α forest and fewer systems in the sub-DLA and DLA regimes, indicating that the HI mass density should be larger with the Rahmati et al. (2013a) SSh prescription. In García et al. (2017b), we find that the largest contribution to ΩHI comes from systems with large column densities, in particular, DLAs. We predict higher values of ΩHI with the R13 HI SSh formulation than C17, regardless of the molecular cooling model considered. It is important to remember that at this redshift (z = 4), both formulations are valid, and their best fitting parameters are calibrated with observations. Thus, our conclusions are not limited by different constraints of the HI SSh modelling.
Interestingly, the number of systems in a column density bin at a given absorption path is barely affected by the SSh prescription, but it depends strongly on the chemistry of the molecules; the gap between the number of systems is approximately fixed when comparing two simulations with and without molecules in the Lyman α forest regime (blue and dark red, and light blue and magenta cases, respectively).
Figure 9 (left panel) displays the cosmic mass density of neutral hydrogen with the self-shielding prescriptions by (blue and dark red for the runs Ch 18 512 MDW and Ch 18 512 MDW mol, respectively) and Chardin et al. (2018) (light blue and magenta corresponding to Ch 18 512 MDW and Ch 18 512 MDW mol, respectively) and compares them with observations by Prochaska et al. (2005) and Prochaska et al. (2009), grey inverted triangles; Zafar et al. (2013), pink square; and Crighton et al. (2015) red stars. As predicted above, the SSh prescription by Rahmati et al. (2013a) gives rise to a larger amount of neutral hydrogen when compared with the results for ΩHI of the Chardin et al. (2018) model. Interestingly, the introduction of this new self-shielding treatment reduces the tension between our models without molecular cooling and the observations at z = 4, and accurately predicts the HI mass density when molecular cooling is taken into account.
This is by far the most important effect of the implementation of a different self-shielding prescription in our simulations: the amount of HI mass density at redshifts between 4-6 is in better agreement with observational detections.
Finally, we point out that models including molecular cooling give a better prediction of ΩHI compared with observations, because they take into account the conversion of atomic to molecular hydrogen at very high densities, where the self-shielding of HI is occurring.
On the right hand side of Figure 9; we show a comparison of ΩHI and ΩDLA (solid and dashed lines, respectively) with observations for ΩDLA by Bird et al. (2017). The amount of HI mass density hosted in DLAs (dashed lines) converges at high redshift (z ≈ 6) for models with a different SSh prescription when the molecular cooling content is fixed. This is indeed quite an interesting result because the R13 SSh prescription has not been calibrated at this redshift, although it is extensively used in the literature at redshifts higher than 5. One can say that the use of the model is justified at z = 6.
Additionally, there is agreement between the predicted trends for ΩDLA (with different self-shielding prescriptions and molecular cooling content models) and observations of this quantity by Bird et al. (2017).
It is worth noting that the column density distribution functions in Figure 8 show that molecular cooling is driven by the conversion of neutral hydrogen to H2, that becomes important in high-density regions where new stars are being formed. The molecules cool the surrounding gas and atomic hydrogen is less abundant. This effect is particularly important in the regime of DLAs (García et al. 2017b). Interestingly, molecular chemistry plays a more relevant role in the amount of neutral hydrogen than the HI self-shielding model itself, although the evolution of the Chardin et al. (2018) model is more dynamic at high redshift than the Rahmati et al. (2013a) one.
Figure 9 leads to the same conclusion in a different way: simulations without molecular cooling (Ch 18 512 MDW) boost the amount of HI compared with Ch 18 512 MDW mol, regardless of the SSh prescription considered. Then, the cosmological mass density increases by a factor of 2 compared with simulations containing molecular cooling. The effect is more pronounced contrasting HI and DLA cosmic mass density: there are two processes involved, the molecular cooling that converts HI into H2 and reduces the amount of HI in the DLA column density range, but also the evolution of the HI-SSh modeling, that becomes more critical at high redshift Rahmati et al. (2013a). SSh stops being valid at z = 6, whilst the Chardin et al. (2018) model is valid up to z = 10.
5. Discussion and Conclusions
This work contains a compilation of variations to the uniform ionizing field assumed in the photoionization models to obtain the results presented in García et al. (2017b) and García et al. (2017b). We find that the large uncertainties in the UVB, especially at high redshift, require better constraints for several probes, and of course, improved UVB models.
In a similar vein, observational detections of metal ionic species could be used to constrain the UVB spectral normalization in the wavelength range where these states occur (100-1000 Å). A careful fine-tuning is required, but most of the steps are clear: a reduction in the normalization of the UV emissivity improves the number of absorbers with low ionization potential energy.
When the emissivity of the assumed UVB is reduced by one dex, we find that the total number of CIV absorbers significantly decreases compared with the original HM12, and that absorbers in the range of the detections by D’Odorico et al. (2013) are definitely not well represented (e.g. there is a discrepancy of the CIV comoving mass density and CIV CDDF with the observations). Instead, there is a moderate improvement in the calculated number of absorbers for SiIV with a softer UVB, in agreement with findings by Bolton et al. (2011).
It is particularly encouraging that the number of absorbers of CII, SiII and OI in the range of the observations also rises when the UVB implemented is softer, independently of the simulation used; therefore, the estimate of the column densities of these low ionization states improves, justifying the hypothesis that led us to do this test. Additional work can be done in this direction, with a more moderate reduction in the emissivity of the UVB that would give better predictions for the column density of low ionization states, and be more compatible with the CIV absorbers incidence rate inferred from the D´Odorico et al. (2013) observations and our mock spectra for that ion.
We also computed some hydrogen statistics up to z = 6. We limited our calculations to this redshift for two reasons: (1) at high redshift a uniform UVB does not provide a good representation of the rapid evolution of HI during reionization; (2) the self-shielding prescription from Rahmati et al (2013a) is calibrated with the photoionization rates of HM12. To alleviate the absence of a self-consistent SSh at higher redshifts we compared our previous results with a recent SSh prescription by Chardin et al. (2018), whose best-fit parameters were calibrated up to z = 10.
We find that at z = 4, the HI CDDF predicted by the Chardin et al. (2018) model produces more neutral hydrogen in systems with low column densities (the Lyman-α forest) and fewer systems in the sub-DLAs and DLAs range. This result leads to higher mass densities of HI, ΩHI, with the Rahmati et al. (2013a) SSh prescription than with Chardin et al. (2018), independently of the molecular cooling model considered. At z = 4, both formulations (Rahmati et al. 2013a; Chardin et al. 2018) were calibrated with observations. Therefore, our results for the HI CDDF and the cosmological mass density of neutral hydrogen are valid, regardless of the assumptions of each HI self-shielding model.
Regardless of the intensity of the UVB field considered, we find a non-negligible number of ion absorbers with column densities above log N ≥ 15 cm-2. This prediction from our models can be tested with future observations that, in principle, will be able to detect rarer high column density systems. In addition, an appreciable difference in the number of high column density absorbers would be detected if we traced high gas overdensity, but our pipeline is currently not tracing gas in this region for statistical reasons, since we produce random lines of sight inside the box.
As discussed in , we confirm that different feedback prescriptions (EDW, MDW) do not make a significant difference in the calculation of the number of absorbers of the ionic transitions. The same conclusion is also true for different models with/without molecular cooling for observables associated to the metal ions. Instead, the low temperature and molecular cooling module has proven to be quite important to match the calculated HI CDDF, ΩHI and ΩDLA with observations available at z = 4 - 6..
The numerical runs and the pipeline of this paper were calibrated to resemble the physical conditions of the gas residing in the CGM and IGM at z ≈ 6. Most of the observables at that time of the Universe are well represented by our theoretical models. Nonetheless, there are a few caveats in this work: first, more observations of metal absorption lines in the spectra of high redshift quasars are required. Although we have included the largest catalogue of HI and ionic detections at high redshift, more observational data are needed to better constrain the emissivity of the UVB. Second, the numerical resolution is still not enough to fully trace the environments where the low ionization states lie, and simultaneously describe the IGM. A new generation of numerical simulations will improve the description of these species, without sacrificing the physics occurring in the inter- and circumgalactic medium. Finally, we stress that radiative transfer effects are not included in our models and, therefore, we do not follow the progression of reionization, nor the evolution of the HII bubbles or their topology. The implicit assumption is that our boxes (that are small compared to the size of the HII bubbles at the redshifts of interest) represent a region of the Universe already reionized at a level given by the HM12 UVB. At 6 < z < 8, chemical enrichment occurs mostly inside and in close proximity of galaxies (interstellar medium, CGM and high density IGM) where, assuming an inside-out progression of reionization, the gas in which metals lie should be ionized. Although proper RT calculations would be more accurate, they are extremely expensive from the computational point of view, but could be done in the future.
A fundamental issue persists in the field from the numerical point of view: it is extremely challenging to model the low ionization states present in the gas and to provide a good description of the environment where they lie, mainly due to insufficient resolution and to the lack of a proper self-shielding treatment for the ions. We considered only the effect of HI self-shielding (Rahmati et al. 2013a; Chardin et al. 2018), but did not introduce any self-shielding of low ionization absorbers (which lie in clumpy structures). A first attempt was proposed for DLA systems at low redshift by Bird et al. (2017). However, current works miss this component at high redshift because it is still not well understood how high density regions self-shield the gas during the progression of reionization.
In summary, we have compared HI and ion observables available at high redshift and found that most of the results discussed are compatible in the redshift range 4 < z < 8. When discrepancies between observations and synthetic calculations arised, we provided a physical explanation of their nature. It is worth noting that all results from mock spectra will be improved in the future with more observational detections of ion absorbers in the high redshift quasar spectra.