Prospects for Redshifted 21 cm Observations of Quasar HiiRegions
- 1 December 2005
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Astronomical Society in The Astrophysical Journal
- Vol. 634 (2) , 715-727
- https://doi.org/10.1086/497160
Abstract
The introduction of low-frequency radio arrays over the coming decade is expected to revolutionize the study of the reionization epoch. Observation of the contrast in redshifted 21 cm emission between a large H II region and the surrounding neutral IGM will be the simplest and most easily interpreted signature. We assess the sensitivity of three generations of planned low-frequency arrays to quasar-generated H II regions. We find that an instrument such as the planned Mileura Widefield Array Low Frequency Demonstrator (LFD) will be able to obtain good signal-to-noise ratios on H II regions around the most luminous quasars and determine some gross geometric properties, e.g., whether the H II region is spherical or conical. A hypothetical follow-up instrument with 10 times the collecting area of the LFD (MWA-5000) will be capable of mapping the detailed geometry of H II regions, while the Square Kilometer Array (SKA) will be capable of detecting very narrow spectral features, as well as the sharpness of the H II region boundary. The SKA will most likely be limited by irreducible noise from fluctuations in the IGM itself. The MWA-5000 (and even the LFD under favorable circumstances) will discover serendipitous H II regions in wide-field observations. We estimate the number of H II regions that are expected to be generated by quasars based on the observed number counts of quasars at z ~ 6. Assuming a late reionization at z ~ 6, we find that there should be several tens of quasar H II regions larger than 4 Mpc at z ~ 6-8 per field of view. Identification of H II regions in forthcoming 21 cm surveys can guide a search for bright galaxies in the middle of these regions. Most of the discovered galaxies would be the massive hosts of dormant quasars that left behind fossil H II cavities that persisted long after the quasar emission ended, owing to the long recombination time of intergalactic hydrogen. A snapshot survey of candidate H II regions selected in redshifted 21 cm image cubes may prove to be the most efficient method for finding very high redshift quasars and galaxies.Keywords
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