Interpreting the evolution of galaxy colours from $z = 8$ to $z = 5$
Mattia Mancini, Raffaella Schneider, Luca Graziani, Rosa Valiante,, Pratika Dayal, Umberto Maio, Benedetta Ciardi

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations with dust physics to interpret galaxy colour evolution from redshift 8 to 5, revealing dust properties, galaxy populations, and implications for star formation rate estimates.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed dust model in simulations to explain UV colours and luminosity functions of high-redshift galaxies, highlighting the role of dust in galaxy evolution.
Findings
Steep SMC-like extinction curve fits observations
Two galaxy populations identified: young, less massive and older, more evolved
Dusty, UV-faint galaxies likely existed at z < 7
Abstract
We attempt to interpret existing data on the evolution of the UV luminosity function and UV colours, , of galaxies at , to improve our understanding of their dust content and ISM properties. To this aim, we post-process the results of a cosmological hydrodynamical simulation with a chemical evolution model, which includes dust formation by supernovae and intermediate mass stars, dust destruction in supernova shocks, and grain growth by accretion of gas-phase elements in dense gas. We find that observations require a steep, Small Magellanic Cloud-like extinction curve and a clumpy dust distribution, where stellar populations younger than 15 Myr are still embedded in their dusty natal clouds. Investigating the scatter in the colour distribution and stellar mass, we find that the observed trends can be explained by the presence of two populations: younger, less…
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