# Rapid early coeval star formation and assembly of the most massive   galaxies in the universe

**Authors:** Douglas Rennehan, Arif Babul, Christopher C. Hayward, Connor Bottrell,, Maan H. Hani, Scott C. Chapman

arXiv: 1907.00977 · 2020-03-04

## TL;DR

This paper challenges the traditional view by showing that some of the universe's most massive galaxies form and assemble their stars much earlier than previously thought, using advanced simulations and observations.

## Contribution

It demonstrates through simulations that brightest cluster galaxies can form rapidly at high redshifts, revising the timeline of galaxy assembly.

## Key findings

- Brightest cluster galaxies can assemble at $z > 3$.
- Protoclusters form massive galaxies within ~1 Gyr.
- Early assembly is more common in the most massive clusters.

## Abstract

The current consensus on the formation and evolution of the brightest cluster galaxies is that their stellar mass forms early ($z \gtrsim 4$) in separate galaxies that then eventually assemble the main structure at late times ($z \lesssim 1$). However, advances in observational techniques have led to the discovery of protoclusters out to $z \sim 7$, suggesting that the late-assembly picture may not be fully complete. If these protoclusters assemble rapidly in the early universe, they should form the brightest cluster galaxies much earlier than suspected by the late-assembly picture. Using a combination of observationally constrained hydrodynamical and dark-matter-only simulations, we show that the stellar assembly time of a sub-set of the brightest cluster galaxies occurs at high redshifts ($z > 3$) rather than at low redshifts ($z < 1$), as is commonly thought. We find, using isolated non-cosmological hydrodynamical simulations, that highly overdense protoclusters assemble their stellar mass into brightest cluster galaxies within $\sim 1$ $\mathrm{Gyr}$ of evolution -- producing massive blue elliptical galaxies at high redshifts ($z \gtrsim 1.5$). We argue that there is a downsizing effect on the cluster scale wherein some of the brightest cluster galaxies in the cores of the most-massive clusters assemble earlier than those in lower-mass clusters. In those clusters with $z = 0$ virial mass $\geqslant 5\times10^{14}$ M$_\mathrm{\odot}$, we find that $9.8$% have their cores assembly early, and a higher fraction of $16.4$% in those clusters above $10^{15}$ M$_\mathrm{\odot}$. The James Webb Space Telescope will be able to detect and confirm our prediction in the near future, and we discuss the implications to constraining the value of $\sigma_\mathrm{8}$.

## Full text

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## Figures

6 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1907.00977/full.md

## References

136 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1907.00977/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1907.00977