Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Conference participants
- Conference photograph / poster
- 1 Physics of H2 and HD
- 2 Formation - Destruction
- 3 Observations and Models
- 4 Extragalactic and Cosmology
- The Role of H2 Molecules in Cosmological Structure Formation
- The Role of H2 Molecules in Primordial Star Formation
- Evolution of Primordial H2 for Different Cosmological Models
- Dynamics of H2 Cool Fronts in the Primordial Gas
- Is Reionization Regulated by H2 in the Early Universe?
- H2 in Galaxies
- Transformation of Galaxies within the Hubble Sequence
- Extragalactic H2 and its Variable Relation to CO
- The Galactic Dark Matter Halo: Is it H2?
- Observations of H2 in Quasar Absorbers
- H2 Emission as a Diagnostic of Physical Processes in Starforming Galaxies
- 5 Outlook
- Author index
Is Reionization Regulated by H2 in the Early Universe?
from 4 - Extragalactic and Cosmology
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Conference participants
- Conference photograph / poster
- 1 Physics of H2 and HD
- 2 Formation - Destruction
- 3 Observations and Models
- 4 Extragalactic and Cosmology
- The Role of H2 Molecules in Cosmological Structure Formation
- The Role of H2 Molecules in Primordial Star Formation
- Evolution of Primordial H2 for Different Cosmological Models
- Dynamics of H2 Cool Fronts in the Primordial Gas
- Is Reionization Regulated by H2 in the Early Universe?
- H2 in Galaxies
- Transformation of Galaxies within the Hubble Sequence
- Extragalactic H2 and its Variable Relation to CO
- The Galactic Dark Matter Halo: Is it H2?
- Observations of H2 in Quasar Absorbers
- H2 Emission as a Diagnostic of Physical Processes in Starforming Galaxies
- 5 Outlook
- Author index
Summary
Molecular hydrogen is a key species for the formation of the first luminous objects in the early universe. It is therefore crucial to understand the various physical processes leading to its formation and destruction and the feedbacks regulating this chemical network. Here we review both the radiative and SN-induced feedbacks and we assess the role of the objects relying on H2 for their collapse in the evolution of the reionization of the universe.
Introduction
At z ≈ 1100 the intergalactic medium (IGM) is expected to recombine and remain neutral until the first sources of ionizing radiation form and reionize it. Until recently, QSOs were thought to be the main source of ionizing photons, but observational constraints suggest the existence of an early population of pregalactic objects (Pop III hereafter) which could have contributed to the reheating, reionization and metal enrichment of the IGM at high redshift. In order to virialize in the potential well of dark matter halos, the gas must have a mass greater than the Jeans mass (Mb > MJ), which, at z ∼ 20 – 30 corresponds to very low virial temperatures (Tvir < 104 K). To have a further collapse and fragmentation of the gas, and to ignite star formation, additional cooling is required. It is well known that in these conditions the only efficient coolant for a plasma of primordial composition, is molecular hydrogen (Abel et al. 1997; Tegmark et al. 1997; Ciardi, Ferrara & Abel 2000 [CFA]).
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- Molecular Hydrogen in Space , pp. 269 - 274Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2000
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