Samenvatting
The Universe’s dark ages end with the formation of the first generation
of galaxies. These objects start emitting ultraviolet radiation that carves out ionized
regions around them. After a sufficient number of ionizing sources have formed, the
ionized fraction of the gas in the Universe rapidly increases until hydrogen becomes
fully ionized. This period, during which the cosmic gas went from neutral to ionized,
is known as the Universe’s Epoch of Reionization . The Epoch of Reionization is
related to many fundamental questions in cosmology, such as properties of the first
galaxies, physics of (mini-)quasars, formation of very metal-poor stars and a slew
of other important research topics in astrophysics. Hence uncovering it will have
far reaching implications on the study of structure formation in the early Universe.
This chapter reviews the current observational evidence for the occurrence of this
epoch, its key theoretical aspects and main characteristics, and finally the various
observational probes that promise to uncover it. A special emphasis is put on the
redshifted 21 cm probe, the various experiments that are currently being either built
or designed, and what we can learn from them about the Epoch of Reionization.
Originele taal-2 | English |
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Aantal pagina's | 59 |
Tijdschrift | Research in Astronomy and Astrophysics |
Volume | 12 |
Nummer van het tijdschrift | 8 |
Status | Published - 2012 |