Understanding the epoch of cosmic Reionization II
LOCATION: Sport & Kurhotel at Bad Moos - Via Val Fiscalina 27, 39030, Sexten
DETAILS
The birth of the first stars, galaxies and black holes heralded the end of the cosmic Dark
Ages, ushering in the Cosmic Dawn. Light from these objects spread out, heating and
ionizing virtually every baryon in our Universe. This Epoch of Reionization (EoR) was
the last major phase change of our Universe, encoding a wealth of information about
the unseen first galaxies and structures in the intergalactic medium (IGM). Despite
spanning the majority of our visible Universe, the EoR has only recently begun to be
explored. We now have many observational clues of the EoR, including from: (i) the
opacity of the Lyman alpha and beta forests; (ii) damping wing imprints in QSO
spectra; (iii) evolution of Lyman alpha emitting galaxies; (iv) clustering of Lyman alpha
emitters; (v) CMB polarization power spectra; (vi) the kinetic Sunyaev-Zel’Dovich
effect in CMB temperature fluctuations; (vii) the cosmic 21-cm signal. However,
interpreting these observations is challenging, requiring careful modeling of both the
cosmic signal as well as associated systematics.
This workshop is a sequel to the extremely successful one in 2023. In the past couple
of years, our sample of high redshift, high signal to noise quasar spectra has increased
dramatically, we obtained tantalizing results from JWST about reionization-era
galaxies, we demonstrated the heating of the IGM heating during the cosmic dawn
implied by upper limits on the 21-cm power spectrum. This year we expect even more
milestones in EoR studies. These include the start of science commissioning by the
Square Kilometer Array (SKA), final design and performance analysis of the Extremely
Large Telescope (ELT), new 21-cm power spectrum measurements/upper limits.
In these exciting times, we wish to bring together the scientific community studying
the EoR to discuss how best to interpret current observations and how we should design
future ones. We will try to put together the pieces of the puzzle of reionization. What
was the timing of the EoR? What sources were responsible? How did they interact
with themselves and their surroundings through feedback mechanisms? What are the
associated observational signatures? What was the role of IGM structures / photon
sinks? How can we improve models of the EoR? How do we best build forward models,
accounting for relevant theoretical and observational systematics? Where are the next
observational breakthroughs? How do we best prepare for upcoming data from
transformational telescopes like JWST, SKA, and ELT?
We expect around 30-40 participants, by invitation only. These will span experts in
observations, theory, as well as data science; breakthroughs in understanding require
synergy between all three of these aspects.
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FEE
400 Eur
WORKSHOP CODE FOR PAYMENT
UCR25
ORGANIZERS
SOC:
Andrei Mesinger (chair), SNS, Pisa
Laura Pentericci, INAF – OAR, Rome
Matteo Viel, SISSA, Trieste
Gianni Bernardi, INAF – IRA, Bologna
Valentina D’Odorico, INAF – OAT, Trieste