Gamma-Ray-Burst Host Galaxy Surveys at Redshift z>4: Probes of Star Formation Rate and Cosmic Reionization
Michele Trenti, Rosalba Perna, Emily M. Levesque, J. Michael Shull,, John T. Stocke

TL;DR
This paper compares gamma-ray burst (GRB) and Lyman-Break-Galaxy (LBG) surveys to better understand star formation rates at high redshift, revealing the importance of faint galaxies in cosmic reionization.
Contribution
It introduces a physically motivated model linking GRB and LBG-derived star formation rates, and proposes a method to constrain faint galaxy populations at high redshift.
Findings
GRB and LBG SFRs are consistent when including faint galaxies.
Predicted high success rate for GRB host detection at z~5.
Galaxies with M_AB>-15 existed at z>5, influencing reionization.
Abstract
Measuring the star formation rate (SFR) at high redshift is crucial for understanding cosmic reionization and galaxy formation. Two common complementary approaches are Lyman-Break-Galaxy (LBG) surveys for large samples and Gamma-Ray-Burst (GRB) observations for sensitivity to SFR in small galaxies. The z>4 GRB-inferred SFR is higher than the LBG rate, but this difference is difficult to understand, as both methods rely on several modeling assumptions. Using a physically motivated galaxy luminosity function model, with star formation in dark-matter halos with virial temperature Tvir>2e4 K (M_DM>2e8 M_sun), we show that GRB and LBG-derived SFRs are consistent if GRBs extend to faint galaxies (M_AB<-11). To test star formation below the detection limit L_lim~0.05L^*_{z=3} of LBG surveys, we propose to measure the fraction f_det(L>L_lim,z) of GRB hosts with L>L_lim. This fraction quantifies…
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