The evolution of Lyman-break galaxies in CDM
C.G. Lacey (1), C.M. Baugh (1), C.S. Frenk (1), A.J. Benson (2). ((1), ICC, Durham, (2) Caltech)

TL;DR
This paper models the evolution of Lyman-break galaxies using two variants of the GALFORM semi-analytical model within the LambdaCDM framework, comparing predictions with observations across a wide redshift range and exploring implications for reionization.
Contribution
It provides a detailed comparison of two galaxy formation models, highlighting the success of the merger-driven starburst model in matching observed LBG properties and evolution.
Findings
The Baugh et al. model aligns well with observed UV luminosity functions from z=3 to 10.
Dust extinction significantly affects LBG luminosity predictions.
Predictions suggest JWST will detect LBGs up to z<15, with implications for reionization studies.
Abstract
We make a detailed investigation of the properties of Lyman-break galaxies (LBGs) in the LambdaCDM model. We present predictions for two published variants of the GALFORM semi-analytical model: the Baugh et al. (2005) model, which has star formation at high redshifts dominated by merger-driven starbursts with a top-heavy IMF, and the Bower et al. (2006) model, which has AGN feedback and a standard Solar neighbourhood IMF throughout. We show predictions for the evolution of the rest-frame far-UV luminosity function in the redshift range z=3-20, and compare with the observed luminosity functions of LBGs at z=3-10. We find that the Baugh et al. model is in excellent agreement with these observations, while the Bower et al. model predicts too many high-luminosity LBGs. Dust extinction, which is predicted self-consistently based on galaxy gas contents, metallicities and sizes, is found to…
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