Hierarchical fragmentation in high redshift galaxies revealed by hydrodynamical simulations
Baptiste Faure, Fr\'ed\'eric Bournaud, J\'er\'emy Fensch, Emanuele, Daddi, Manuel Behrendt, Andreas Burkert, Johan Richard

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution hydrodynamical simulations to reveal that high-redshift galaxies contain hierarchical structures, with small gas clusters forming within larger complexes, explaining observational biases against detecting giant clumps.
Contribution
It demonstrates that giant star-forming clumps are composed of smaller clusters within larger complexes, and explains why they are often missed in high-resolution observations.
Findings
Giant clumps are formed by smaller gas clusters within larger complexes.
High-resolution observations may miss the hierarchical structure, leading to non-detection of giant clumps.
Simulated giant clumps can be gravitationally bound even if not detected in mock observations.
Abstract
High-redshift star-forming galaxies have very different morphologies compared to nearby ones. Indeed, they are often dominated by bright star-forming structures of masses up to dubbed {\guillemotleft}giant clumps{\guillemotright}. However, recent observations questioned this result by showing only low-mass structures or no structure at all. We use Adaptative Mesh Refinement hydrodynamical simulations of galaxies with parsec-scale resolution to study the formation of structures inside clumpy high-redshift galaxies. We show that in very gas-rich galaxies star formation occurs in small gas clusters with masses below that are themselves located inside giant complexes with masses up to and sometimes . Those massive structures are similar in mass and size to the giant clumps observed in imaging…
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