The physics driving the cosmic star formation history
Joop Schaye, Claudio Dalla Vecchia, C. M. Booth, Robert P. C. Wiersma,, Tom Theuns, Marcel R. Haas, Serena Bertone, Alan R. Duffy, I. G. McCarthy,, Freeke van de Voort

TL;DR
This study uses extensive cosmological simulations to identify the key physical processes shaping the cosmic star formation history, highlighting the roles of dark matter, feedback mechanisms, and gas cooling.
Contribution
It systematically analyzes the impact of various physical processes on star formation history, revealing the self-regulation mechanism and insensitivity to the star formation law.
Findings
Star formation peaks at intermediate redshift and declines due to feedback and gas depletion.
Dark matter halo growth limits early star formation.
Black hole feedback is crucial for matching observed decline in star formation.
Abstract
We investigate the physics driving the cosmic star formation (SF) history using the more than fifty large, cosmological, hydrodynamical simulations that together comprise the OverWhelmingly Large Simulations (OWLS) project. We systematically vary the parameters of the model to determine which physical processes are dominant and which aspects of the model are robust. Generically, we find that SF is limited by the build-up of dark matter haloes at high redshift, reaches a broad maximum at intermediate redshift, then decreases as it is quenched by lower cooling rates in hotter and lower density gas, gas exhaustion, and self-regulated feedback from stars and black holes. The higher redshift SF is therefore mostly determined by the cosmological parameters and to a lesser extent by photo-heating from reionization. The location and height of the peak in the SF history, and the steepness of the…
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