Simulating high-redshift galaxies
R. Salvaterra, A. Ferrara, P. Dayal

TL;DR
This paper uses advanced cosmological simulations to study high-redshift galaxies, matching observed luminosity functions and revealing details about their star formation, metallicity, dust content, and the role of Pop III stars.
Contribution
It introduces detailed simulations including Pop III-Pop II transition, accurately reproducing observed high-z galaxy properties and providing insights into early galaxy evolution.
Findings
Simulated luminosity functions match observations at 5<z<10.
High-z galaxies are rapidly enriched with metals and are mostly dust-free.
Pop III stars contribute less than 5% to galaxy luminosity at z=6-10.
Abstract
Recent observations have gathered a considerable sample of high redshift galaxy candidates and determined the evolution of their luminosity function (LF). To interpret these findings, we use cosmological SPH simulations including, in addition to standard physical processes, a detailed treatment of the Pop III-Pop II transition in early objects. The simulated high-z galaxies match remarkably well the amplitude and slope of the observed LF in the redshift range 5<z<10. The LF shifts towards fainter luminosities with increasing redshift, while its faint-end slope keeps an almost constant value, \alpha ~-2. The stellar populations of high-z galaxies have ages of 100-300 (40-130) Myr at z=5 (z=7-8), implying an early (z>9.4) start of their star formation activity; the specific star formation rate is almost independent of galactic stellar mass. These objects are enriched rapidly with metals…
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