Following the Cosmic Evolution of Pristine Gas II: The search for Pop III-Bright Galaxies
Richard Sarmento, Evan Scannapieco, and Seth Cohen

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations to identify high-redshift galaxies rich in Population III stars, providing guidance on optimal redshifts and magnitudes for observational searches with telescopes like JWST.
Contribution
It introduces a new subgrid model for pristine gas tracking in large-scale simulations, predicting the prevalence of Pop III-bright galaxies across redshifts and magnitudes.
Findings
Less than 1% of bright galaxies are Pop III-bright at z=7-8.
Approximately 17% of galaxies at z=9 are Pop III-bright.
At z=14-15, 29-41% of galaxies are Pop III-bright regardless of brightness.
Abstract
Direct observational searches for Population III (Pop III) stars at high redshift are faced with the question of how to select the most promising targets for spectroscopic follow-up. To help answer this, we use a large-scale cosmological simulation, augmented with a new subgrid model that tracks the fraction of pristine gas, to follow the evolution of high-redshift galaxies and the Pop III stars they contain. We generate rest-frame ultraviolet (UV) luminosity functions for our galaxies and find that they are consistent with current observations. Throughout the redshift range we identify "Pop III-bright" galaxies as those with at least 75% of their flux coming from Pop III stars. While less than 1% of galaxies brighter than mag are Pop III--bright in the range , roughly 17% of such galaxies are Pop III--bright at ,…
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