Young and turbulent: the early life of massive galaxy progenitors
Davide Fiacconi (1,2), Lucio Mayer (2), Piero Madau (3,4), Alessandro, Lupi (4), Massimo Dotti (5,6), Francesco Haardt (6,7) ((1) IoA, Cambridge,, (2) ICS, Zurich, (3) UCSC, (4) IAP, Paris, (5) Bicocca, Milan, (6) INFN,, Milan, (7) DiSAT, Como)

TL;DR
This study uses the Ponos simulation suite to explore the early turbulent, hot, and thick disc phase of massive galaxy progenitors at high redshift, revealing their unique star formation and gas dynamics before black hole feedback dominates.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the early evolution of massive galaxies at z>6, highlighting the hot, turbulent disc regime as a fundamental phase distinct from lower-redshift galaxy dynamics.
Findings
Galaxies at z>6 have high star formation rates (~20 M_sun/yr) and thick, turbulent gas discs.
The gas velocity dispersion is around 40 km/s, with a high Toomre Q parameter (~1.5-2).
The hot, turbulent disc regime differs from the cold, gravito-turbulent regime at lower redshifts.
Abstract
We present results from the "Ponos" simulation suite on the early evolution of a massive, M galaxy. At , before feedback from a central supermassive black hole becomes dominant, the main galaxy has a stellar mass M and a star formation rate M yr. The galaxy sits near the expected main sequence of star-forming galaxies at those redshifts, and resembles moderately star-forming systems observed at . The high specific star formation rate results in vigorous heating and stirring of the gas by supernovae feedback, and the galaxy develops a thick and turbulent disc, with gas velocity dispersion km s, rotation to dispersion ratio , and with a significant amount of gas at K. The Toomre parameter always exceeds the critical value for…
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