A suppressed contribution of low mass galaxies to reionization due to supernova feedback
Stuart Wyithe, Abraham Loeb

TL;DR
This paper presents a model showing supernova feedback significantly suppresses star formation in low mass galaxies, reducing their role in reionization and aligning with high-redshift observations.
Contribution
The study introduces a simple, physically motivated model incorporating supernova feedback that explains the suppressed star formation in low mass galaxies during reionization.
Findings
Supernova feedback quenches starbursts after ~10^7 years.
Low mass galaxies contribute minimally to reionization.
Model predictions align with observed star formation relations at high redshift.
Abstract
Motivated by recent observations of the star formation rate density function out to z~7, we describe a simple model for the star formation rate density function at high redshift based on the extended Press-Schechter formalism. This model postulates a starburst following each major merger, lasting for a time t_SF and converting at most f_star of galactic gas into stars. We include a simple physical prescription for supernovae feedback that suppresses star formation in low mass galaxies. Constraining t_SF and f_star to describe the observed star formation rate density at high redshifts, we find that individual starbursts were terminated after a time t_SF~10^7 years. This is comparable to the main-sequence lifetimes of supernova progenitors, indicating that high redshift starbursts are quenched once supernovae feedback had time to develop. High redshift galaxies convert ~10% of their mass…
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