Dark-ages reionization and galaxy-formation simulation - VI. The origins and fate of the highest known redshift galaxy
Simon J. Mutch, Chuanwu Liu, Gregory B. Poole, Paul M. Geil, Alan R., Duffy, Michele Trenti, Pascal A. Oesch, Garth D. Illingworth, Andrei, Mesinger, J. Stuart B. Wyithe

TL;DR
This study uses a semi-analytic galaxy formation model to investigate the origins and evolution of GN-z11, the brightest galaxy at redshift 11.1, revealing its rapid early growth and potential detectability at even higher redshifts.
Contribution
The paper presents the first detailed modeling of GN-z11's formation and fate, matching observed properties and predicting its progenitors' detectability at redshifts up to 14.
Findings
GN-z11 analogues are among the most massive at z=11.1 but not the most massive by z=5.
Progenitors exhibit rapid, smooth mass growth with high star formation rates.
Future JWST surveys could detect similar objects up to z~14.
Abstract
Using Hubble data, including new grism spectra, Oesch et al. recently identified GN-z11, an =-21.1 galaxy at =11.1 (just 400Myr after the big bang). With an estimated stellar mass of 10M, this galaxy is surprisingly bright and massive, raising questions as to how such an extreme object could form so early in the Universe. Using \Meraxes{}, a semi-analytic galaxy-formation model developed as part of the Dark-ages Reionization And Galaxy-formation Observables from Numerical Simulations (DRAGONS) programme, we investigate the potential formation mechanisms and eventual fate of GN-z11. The volume of our simulation is comparable to that of the discovery observations and possesses two analogue galaxies of similar luminosity to this remarkably bright system. Existing in the two most massive subhaloes at =11.1 (=1.4$\times…
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