Abstract
SCORCH (Simulations and Constructions of the Reionization of Cosmic Hydrogen) is a new project to study the Epoch of Reionization (EoR). In this first paper, we probe the connection between observed high-redshift galaxies and simulated dark matter halos to better understand the abundance and evolution of the primary source of ionizing radiation. High-resolution N-body simulations are run to quantify the abundance of dark matter halos as a function of mass $M$, accretion rate $\dot{M}$, and redshift $z$. A new fit for the halo mass function $dn/dM$ is $\approx 20\%$ more accurate at the high-mass end where bright galaxies are expected to reside. A novel approach is used to fit the halo accretion rate function $dn/d\dot{M}$ in terms of the halo mass function. Abundance matching against the observed galaxy luminosity function is used to estimate the luminosity-mass relation and the luminosity-accretion-rate relation. The inferred star formation efficiency is not monotonic with $M$ nor $\dot{M}$, but reaches a maximum value at a characteristic mass $\sim 2 \times 10^{11}\ M_\odot$ and a characteristic accretion rate $\sim 6 \times 10^2\ M_\odot/{\rm yr}$ at $z \approx 6$. We find a universal EoR luminosity-accretion-rate relation and construct a fiducial model for the galaxy luminosity function. The Schechter parameters evolve such that $\phi_\star$ decreases, $M_\star$ is more positive (fainter), and $\alpha$ is more negative (steeper) at higher redshifts. We forecast for the upcoming James Webb Space Telescope and show that with apparent magnitude limit $m_{\rm AB} \approx 31\ (32)$, it can observe $\gtrsim 11\ (24)$ unlensed galaxies per square degree per unit redshift at least down to $M_\star$ at $z \lesssim 13\ (14)$.
Highlights
Cosmic reionization is a frontier topic in cosmology with plenty of scientific richness for theoretical and observational explorations
We probe the connection between observed high-redshift galaxies and simulated dark matter halos to better understand the primary source of ionizing radiation
The reionization history is determined by the evolving abundance of escaped ionization photons, which depends on the UV luminosity function, the spectral energy distribution (SED), and the radiation escape fraction of highredshift galaxies
Summary
Cosmic reionization is a frontier topic in cosmology with plenty of scientific richness for theoretical and observational explorations. SCORCH (Simulations and Constructions of the Reionization of Cosmic Hydrogen) is a new project to study the EoR and provide useful theoretical tools and predictions to facilitate more accurate and efficient comparison between observations and theory. The galaxy luminosity function is well fit by a Schechter function and the redshift dependence of the parameters have been quantified (e.g. Bouwens et al 2014; Oesch et al 2014; Bouwens et al 2015a; Finkelstein et al 2015a) It is unclear what is the physical origin for the evolution and how is it connected to the growth of structure, that of dark matter halos. In Paper I, we quantify the connection between observed high-redshift galaxies and simulated dark matter halos in order to better understand the abundance and evolution of the primary source of ionizing radiation.
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