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Exploration of the high-redshift universe enabled by THESEUS

Authors :
Tanvir, N. R.
Floc'h, E. Le
Christensen, L.
Caruana, J.
Salvaterra, R.
Ghirlanda, G.
Ciardi, B.
Maio, U.
D'Odorico, V.
Piedipalumbo, E.
Campana, S.
Noterdaeme, P.
Graziani, L.
Amati, L.
Bagoly, Z.
Balázs, L. G.
Basa, S.
Behar, E.
Bozzo, E.
De Cia, A.
Della Valle, M.
De Pasquale, M.
Frontera, F.
Gomboc, A.
Götz, D.
Horvath, I.
Hudec, R.
Mereghetti, S.
O'Brien, P. T.
Osborne, J. P.
Paltani, S.
Rosati, P.
Sergijenko, O.
Stanway, E. R.
Szécsi, D.
Toth, L. V.
Urata, Y.
Vergani, S.
Zane, S.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

At peak, long-duration gamma-ray bursts are the most luminous sources of electromagnetic radiation known. Since their progenitors are massive stars, they provide a tracer of star formation and star-forming galaxies over the whole of cosmic history. Their bright power-law afterglows provide ideal backlights for absorption studies of the interstellar and intergalactic medium back to the reionization era. The proposed THESEUS mission is designed to detect large samples of GRBs at $z>6$ in the 2030s, at a time when supporting observations with major next generation facilities will be possible, thus enabling a range of transformative science. THESEUS will allow us to explore the faint end of the luminosity function of galaxies and the star formation rate density to high redshifts; constrain the progress of re-ionisation beyond $z\gtrsim6$; study in detail early chemical enrichment from stellar explosions, including signatures of Population III stars; and potentially characterize the dark energy equation of state at the highest redshifts.<br />Comment: Submitted to Experimental Astronomy

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2104.09532
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10686-021-09778-w