Early galaxy formation in warm dark matter cosmologies
Pratika Dayal, Andrei Mesinger, Fabio Pacucci

TL;DR
This paper compares galaxy formation in cold and warm dark matter cosmologies, showing how different dark matter particle masses affect galaxy assembly, observable properties, and the potential of JWST to distinguish these models.
Contribution
It introduces a framework for high-redshift galaxy formation in various dark matter models, highlighting differences in galaxy assembly and evolution that can be tested with JWST.
Findings
WDM with particle mass ≥ 3 keV produces similar galaxy properties to CDM.
Lower WDM masses delay and accelerate stellar assembly, reducing small-mass halos.
Redshift evolution of stellar mass density can distinguish dark matter models.
Abstract
We present a framework for high-redshift () galaxy formation that traces their dark matter (DM) and baryonic assembly in four cosmologies: Cold Dark Matter (CDM) and Warm Dark Matter (WDM) with particle masses of 1.5, 3 and 5 . We use the same astrophysical parameters regulating star formation and feedback, chosen to match current observations of the evolving ultra violet luminosity function (UV LF). We find that the assembly of observable (with current and upcoming instruments) galaxies in CDM and WDM results in similar halo mass to light ratios (M/L), stellar mass densities (SMDs) and UV LFs. However the suppression of small-scale structure leads to a notably delayed and subsequently more rapid stellar assembly in the WDM model. Thus galaxy assembly in WDM cosmologies is characterized by: (i) a…
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