Radiative properties of the first galaxies: rapid transition between blue and red
Shohei Arata, Hidenobu Yajima, Kentaro Nagamine, Yuexing Li, Sadegh, Khochfar

TL;DR
This study combines simulations and radiative transfer to explore how early galaxies rapidly transition between blue and red states, driven by feedback and star formation, affecting their detectability in different wavelengths.
Contribution
It provides new predictions of the multi-wavelength radiative properties of first galaxies at high redshift, highlighting the rapid spectral energy distribution changes due to feedback.
Findings
UV photon escape fraction fluctuates between 0.2 and 0.8 at z<10
Galaxies become bright in sub-millimeter wavelengths when dusty gas covers star-forming regions
Detection probability of high-z galaxies with ALMA exceeds 50% for halos >10^{11} M_sun at z<7
Abstract
Recent observations have successfully detected UV-bright and infrared-bright galaxies in the epoch of reionization. However, the origin of their radiative properties has not been understood yet. Combining cosmological hydrodynamic simulations and radiative transfer calculations, we present predictions of multi-wavelength radiative properties of the first galaxies at . Using zoom-in initial conditions, we investigate three massive galaxies and their satellites in different environment and halo masses: (Halo-10), (Halo-11) and (Halo-12) at . We find that most of gas and dust are ejected from star-forming regions by supernova feedback, which allows UV photons to escape. We show that the peak of the spectral energy distribution (SED) rapidly changes between…
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