Gamma-ray Bursts and the Early Star-formation History
R. Chary, P. Petitjean, B. Robertson, M. Trenti, E. Vangioni

TL;DR
This paper reviews how gamma-ray burst rates at high redshift inform star-formation history, metallicity evolution, and feedback processes, suggesting GRBs are effective probes of early universe conditions despite some biases.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of high-z GRB rates, metallicity predictions, and feedback effects, highlighting GRBs as less biased tracers of early star formation than other methods.
Findings
High GRB rates per unit star-formation at z>3.
Consistency of metallicity predictions with observed data.
GRBs as probes of metallicity evolution and feedback in low-mass galaxies.
Abstract
We review the uncertainties in high-z star-formation rate (SFR) measures and the constraints that one obtains from high-z gamma-ray burst (GRB) rates on them. We show that at the present time, the GRB rates per unit star-formation at z>3 are higher than at lower redshift. We also compare metallicity predictions made using a hierarchical model of cosmic chemical evolution based on two recently proposed SFRs, one based on the observed galaxy luminosity function at high redshift and one based on the GRB rate and find that within the considerable scatter in metal abundance measures, they both are consistent with the data. Analyzing the ensemble of different measurements together, we conclude that despite metallicity biases, GRBs may be a less biased probe of star-formation at z>3 than at z<2. There is likely to be a common origin to the high GRB rate per unit star-formation and the high…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
