Publications

Journal Articles


21 cm signal from dark-age collapsing halos with a detailed molecular cooling treatment

Published in Astronomy & Astrophysics, 2025

-Context. To understand the formation of the first stars, a detailed description of the thermal and chemical processes in collapsing gas clouds is essential. Molecular cooling, particularly via \(H_2\), plays a significant role in triggering thermal instabilities that lead to star formation. The 21 cm hydrogen line serves as a potential probe of the first collapsing structures during the dark ages of the early Universe, and it is affected by the gas temperature evolution. -Aims. We aim to investigate the molecular cooling in the gas halos prior to the formation of the first stars, with a particular focus on how the \(H_2\) cooling affects the gas temperature. Additionally, we explore the sensitivity of the 21 cm hydrogen line to these cooling processes during the collapse of the first overdense regions. -Results. We introduce the CHEMFAST code, which tracks the evolution of chemical abundances and computes the 21 cm neutral hydrogen signal in collapsing halos. Our results show that molecular cooling significantly affects the gas temperature inside collapsing clouds of mass ranging from \(10^6\) to \(10^6\) \(M_\odot\), influencing the 21 cm signal. The signal exhibits an emission feature that is distinct from the one predicted in simpler expansion models. -Conclusions. The 21 cm brightness temperature inside collapsing clouds displays an emission feature driven by molecular cooling, closely mirroring the gas temperature evolution. This makes the dark-age 21 cm signal a promising probe for studying the thermal processes and structure formation in the early Universe.

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Probing dark relativistic species and their interactions with dark matter through CMB and 21 cm surveys

Published in Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics, 2025

We investigate the sensitivity of the 21 cm power spectrum from cosmic dawn and the epoch of reionization to models of free-streaming dark radiation (parameterized through \(N_{eff}\)) and interacting dark radiation-dark matter models (DM-DR). The latter models have gained attention for their potential in addressing recent cosmological tensions and structure formation challenges. We perform a Fisher matrix analysis under different assumptions regarding the astrophysical modeling, and forecast the sensitivity of HERA observations, combined with CMB data from Planck and the Simons Observatory (SO), to \(N_{eff}\) and DM-DR interaction modeled using the ETHOS framework assuming a constant scattering rate between the two components. Most importantly, we find that 21 cm observations can improve the sensitivity to the DM-DR interaction rate by up to four order of magnitude compared to Planck and SO. Conversely, in the limit of low interaction rate (which asymptotically matches \(N_{eff}\)), CMB data dominates the constraining power, but the inclusion of HERA data can provide a ∼ 20% improvement in sensitivity over CMB data alone. Moreover, we find that HERA observations will be able to probe a region of the DM-DR interaction parameter space which is promising to explain the weak lensing amplitude ‘\(S_8\)’ tension. Our results demonstrate the complementarity of 21 cm and CMB data in exploring dark sector interactions.

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Conference Papers