Genesis and evolution of dust in galaxies in the early Universe II. Rapid dust evolution in quasars at z > 6
Christa Gall, Anja C. Andersen, Jens Hjorth

TL;DR
This study models the rapid formation of large dust quantities in high-redshift quasars, showing that supernovae and top-heavy IMFs are crucial for early dust enrichment within 30-170 million years.
Contribution
It demonstrates that significant dust in z > 6 quasars can form quickly through supernovae with top-heavy IMFs, aligning models with observations at early cosmic times.
Findings
Dust can form rapidly within 30 Myr after starburst onset.
Models with top-heavy IMFs best match observed dust quantities.
Supernovae are the primary dust source at these epochs.
Abstract
We assess the most plausible scenarios for generating large amounts of dust in high-z quasars (QSOs) on the basis of observationally derived physical properties of QSOs at z > 6. We use a chemical evolution model to compute the temporal progression of quantities, such as the amount of dust and gas, stellar masses, star formation rates (SFRs) and the metallicity for various combinations of the initial mass function (IMF), the mass of the galaxy, dust production efficiencies, and the degree of dust destruction in the ISM. We investigate the influence of the SFR on the evolution of these quantities, and determine the earliest epochs at which agreement with observations can be achieved. We apply the obtained results to individual QSOs at z > 6. We find that large quantities of dust can be generated rapidly as early as 30 Myr after the onset of the starburst when the SFR of the starburst is…
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