The distribution and physical properties of high-redshift [OIII] emitters in a cosmological hydrodynamics simulation
Kana Moriwaki, Naoki Yoshida, Ikkoh Shimizu, Yuichi Harikane, Yuichi, Matsuda, Hiroshi Matsuo, Takuya Hashimoto, Akio K. Inoue, Yoichi Tamura,, Tohru Nagao

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations to analyze the physical properties and distribution of high-redshift [OIII] emitters, providing insights into their structure, star formation, and potential for future JWST observations.
Contribution
It presents a detailed simulation-based analysis of [OIII] 88 μm emitters at high redshift, linking their properties to star formation and metallicity, and suggests observational strategies with JWST.
Findings
Bright [OIII] emitters have stellar masses >10^9 M_sun and SFR >3 M_sun/yr
Simulated [OIII] luminosities align with recent high-redshift observations
Galaxies show localized star formation with [OIII] gas overlapping young stars
Abstract
Recent observations with the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) detected far-infrared emission lines such as the [OIII] 88 \mu m line from galaxies at . Far-infrared lines can be used to probe the structure and kinematics of such high-redshift galaxies as well as to accurately determine their spectroscopic redshifts. We use a cosmological simulation of galaxy formation to study the physical properties of [OIII] 88 \mu m emitters. In a comoving volume of 50 Mpc on a side, we locate 34 galaxies with stellar masses greater than at , and more than 270 such galaxies at . We calculate the [OIII] 88 \mu m luminosities () by combining a physical model of HII regions with emission line calculations using the photoionization code CLOUDY. We show that the resulting , for a given star formation…
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