Title: Helium Recombination
1Helium Recombination
- Christopher Hirata (IAS)
- in collaboration with Eric Switzer (Princeton)
- astro-ph/0609XXX
2Recombination Physics
- Role of recombination in the CMB
- Standard recombination history
- New physics
- Preliminary results for helium(hydrogen coming
later)
3Cosmic microwave background
- The CMB has revolutionized cosmology- Tight
parameter constraints (in combination with other
data sets)- Stringent test of standard
assumptions Gaussianity, adiabatic initial
conditions- Physically robust understood from
first principles
WMAP Science Team (2006)
4Need for CMB Theory
- This trend will continue in the future with
Planck, ACT/SPT, and E/B polarization
experiments. - But the theory will have to be solved to ltlt1
accuracy in order to make full use of these data. - Theory is straightforward and tractable linear
GR perturbation theory Boltzmann equation.
5This is the CMB theory!
6This is the CMB theory!
ne electron density (depends on recombination)
7Recombination history
He2 e- ? He no effect
He e- ? He z damping tail degenerate with ns
H e- ? H z acoustic peak positions degenerate
with DA ?z polarization amplitude
z
as computed by RECFAST (Seager, Sasselov, Scott
2000) The standard recombination code.
8Standard theory of H recombination(Peebles 1968,
Zeldovich et al 1968)
- Effective three level atom H ground state, H
excited states, and continuum - Direct recombination to ground state ineffective.
- Excited states originally assumed in equilibrium.
(Seager et al followed each level individually
and found a slightly faster recombination.)
9Standard theory of H recombination(Peebles 1968,
Zeldovich et al 1968)
- For H atom in excited level, 3 possible fates
- 2? decay to ground state (?2?)
- Lyman-? resonance escape (?6ALy?Pesc)
- photoionization(? )
- Pesc1/?8?H/3nHIALy??Ly?3.
10Standard theory of H recombination(Peebles 1968,
Zeldovich et al 1968)
- Effective recombination rate is recombination
coefficient to excited states times branching
fraction to ground state
11Standard theory of H recombination(Peebles 1968,
Zeldovich et al 1968)
- ? 2-photon decay rate from 2s
- Pesc escape probability from Lyman-? line
- ALy? Lyman-? decay rate
- ?e recombination rate to excited states
- gi degeneracy of level i
- ?i photoionization rate from level i
- R Rydberg
12Standard theory of H recombination(Peebles 1968,
Zeldovich et al 1968)
- ? 2-photon decay rate from 2s
- Pesc escape probability from Lyman-? line
probability that Lyman-? photon will not
re-excite another H atom. - Higher ? or Pesc ? faster recombination. If ? or
Pesc is large we have approximate Saha
recombination.
13Standard theory of He ? He recombination
- Essentially the same equation as H.
- Only spin singlet He is relevant in standard
theory (triplet not connected to ground state). - Differences are degeneracy factors, rate
coefficients, and 1s2s-1s2p nondegeneracy. - Excited states are in equilibrium (even in full
level code). - This is exactly the equation integrated in
RECFAST.
14Is this all the physics?
- Resonance escape from higher-order lines H
Ly?, Ly?, etc. and He 1s2-1snp (Dubrovich
Grachev 2005) - Feedback Ly? photons redshift, become Ly?, and
re-excite H atoms. - Stimulated two-photon transitions (Chluba
Sunyaev 2006) - Two-photon absorption of redshifted Ly? photons
H(1s)?CMB?red-Ly??H(2s).
15Is this all the physics?
- Resonance escape from semiforbiddenHe
1s2(S0)-1snp(S1) transition (Dubrovich
Grachev 2005) - Effect of absorption of He resonance and
continuum photons by hydrogen (increases Pesc)
(e.g. Hu et al 1995) - Higher-order two-photon transitions, 1s-ns and
1s-nd (Dubrovich Grachev 2005)
16Revisiting Recombination
- Project underway at Princeton/IAS to re-solve
recombination including all these effects. - Preliminary results are presented here for
helium. - Hydrogen will require more work due to higher
optical depth in resonance lines.
17Effect of Feedback
He I
?xe0.006
H I
?xe0.001
Plot by E. Switzer
18Stimulated 2-photon decays and absorption of
redshifted Lyman-? photons
He I
?xe 0.00003
H I
?xe 0.0008
Stimulated 2? decay Including re-absorption of
redshifted resonance photons
Plot by E. Switzer
19HI effect on Helium recombination I
- Small amount of neutral hydrogen can speed up
helium recombination - Issue debated during the 1990s (Hu et al 1995,
Seager et al 2000) but not definitively settled. - Must consider effect of H on photon escape
probability. This is a line transfer problem and
is not solved by any simple analytic argument.
We use Monte Carlo simulation (9 days x 32 CPUs).
20HI effect on Helium recombination II
- Must follow 4 effects-- emission/absorption in
He line (complete redistribution)-- coherent
scattering in He line (partial redistribution)--
HI continuum emission/absorption-- Hubble
redshifting - Conceptually, as long as complete redistribution
is efficient, He line is optically thick out to - Compare to frequency range over which H I is
optically thick
21Helium recombination history(including effects
1-6)
SAHA EQUILIBRIUM
OLD
NEW
??line lt ??HI
??line gt ??HI
Plot by E. Switzer
22What about 2-photon decays?
- 2-photon decays from excited states n3 have been
proposed to speed up recombination (Dubrovich
Grachev 2005) - Rate (in atomic units)
- Sum includes continuum levels.
- Same equation for He (replace r?r1r2).
- Photon energies EEEnl,1s. (Raman scattering
if E or Elt0.) - The 2-photon decays are simply the coherent
superposition of the damping wings of 1-photon
processes.
232-photon decays (cont.)
- How to find contribution to recombination?
Argument by Dubrovich Grachev rests on three
points - Photons emitted in a Lyman line (resonance) are
likely to be immediately re-absorbed, hence no
net production of H(1s). - Largest dipole matrix element from ns or nd state
is to np - Therefore take only this term in sum over
intermediate states and get - Compare to two-photon rates from 2s 8s-1 (H)
and 51s-1 (He).
24(No Transcript)
2531S (1 pole)
31D (1 pole)
26Whats going on?
- Large negative contribution to 2-photon rate from
interference of nn and n?n terms in summation. - Cancellation becomes more exact as n??.
- For large values of n and fixed upper photon
energy E, rate scales as n-3, not n. (e.g.
Florescu et al 1987) - Semiclassical reason is that 2-photon decay
occurs when electron is near nucleus. The period
of the electrons orbit is T?n3, so probability
of being near nucleus is ?n-3. (Same argument in
He.) - Bottom line for recombination n2,3 dominate
2-photon rate smaller contribution from
successively higher n.
27Why havent we solved hydrogen yet?
- Its harder than helium!
- Larger optical depths few x 108 vs. few x 107.
- Consequently damping wings of Lyman lines in H
overlap - The Lyman series of hydrogen contains broad
regions of the spectrum with optical depth of
order unity. This can only be solved by a
radiative transfer code.
28Summary
- Recombination must be solved to high accuracy in
order to realize full potential of CMB
experiments. - There are significant new effects in helium
recombination, especially H opacity. - Extension to H recombination is in progress.
- Is there a way to be sure we havent missed
anything?