Theoretical considerations for star formation at low and high redshift
Bruce G. Elmegreen

TL;DR
This paper reviews how star formation processes and resulting structures vary across different cosmic environments and epochs, highlighting differences between high and low redshift galaxies due to environmental factors.
Contribution
It provides a theoretical analysis of how environmental conditions influence star formation mechanisms and galaxy morphology evolution over cosmic time.
Findings
High redshift star formation leads to denser, more massive stellar clusters.
Galaxies at high redshift exhibit more chaotic, thicker disks with larger cloud complexes.
Current galaxy morphology differences are linked to environmental evolution and star formation conditions.
Abstract
Star formation in strongly self-gravitating cloud cores should be similar at all redshifts, forming single or multiple stars with a range of masses determined by local magneto-hydrodynamics and gravity. The formation processes for these cores, however, as well as their structures, temperatures, Mach numbers, etc., and the boundedness and mass distribution functions of the resulting stars, should depend on environment, as should the characteristic mass, density, and column density at which cloud self-gravity dominates other forces. Because the environments for high and low redshift star formation differ significantly, we expect the resulting gas to stellar conversion details to differ also. At high redshift, the universe is denser and more gas-rich, so the active parts of galaxies are denser and more gas rich too, leading to slightly shorter gas consumption timescales, higher cloud…
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