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The intergalactic medium is expected to be at its coldest point before the formation of the first stars in the universe. Motivated by recent results from the EDGES experiment, we revisit the standard calculation of the kinetic temperature of the neutral gas through this period. When the first ultraviolet (UV) sources turn on, photons redshift into the Lyman lines of neutral hydrogen and repeatedly scatter within the Lyman-$alpha$ line. They heat the gas via atomic recoils, and, through the Wouthuysen-Field effect, set the spin temperature of the 21-cm hyperfine (spin-flip) line of atomic hydrogen in competition with the resonant cosmic microwave background (CMB) photons. We show that the Lyman-$alpha$ photons also mediate energy transfer between the CMB photons and the thermal motions of the hydrogen atoms. In the absence of X-ray heating, this new mechanism is the major correction to the temperature of the adiabatically cooling gas ($sim 10 %$ at $z=17$), and is several times the size of the heating rate found in previous calculations. We also find that the effect is more dramatic in non-standard scenarios that either enhance the radio background above the CMB or invoke new physics to cool the gas in order to explain the EDGES results. The coupling with the radio background can reduce the depth of the 21-cm absorption feature by almost a factor of two relative to the case with no sources of heating, and prevent the feature from developing a flattened bottom. As an inevitable consequence of the UV background that generates the absorption feature, this heating should be accounted for in any theoretical prediction.
Upcoming measurements of the highly redshifted 21cm line with next-generation radio telescopes such as HERA and SKA will provide the intriguing opportunity to probe dark matter (DM) physics during the Epoch of Reionization (EoR), Cosmic Dawn, and the
We present a detailed analysis of an astrophysical mechanism that generates cosmological magnetic fields during the Epoch of Reionization. It is based on the photoionization of the Intergalactic Medium by the first sources formed in the Universe. Fir
Delensing is an increasingly important technique to reverse the gravitational lensing of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) and thus reveal primordial signals the lensing may obscure. We present a first demonstration of delensing on Planck tempera
During reionization, the intergalactic medium is heated impulsively by supersonic ionization fronts (I-fronts). The peak gas temperatures behind the I-fronts, $T_mathrm{reion}$, are a key uncertainty in models of the thermal history after reionizatio
We aim to present a tutorial on the detection, parameter estimation and statistical analysis of compact sources (far galaxies, galaxy clusters and Galactic dense emission regions) in cosmic microwave background observations. The topic is of great rel