The cosmological star formation history from the Local Cosmological Volume of galaxies and constraints on the matter homogeneity
Moritz Haslbauer (Bonn), Pavel Kroupa (Bonn, Prague), Tereza Jerabkova, (ESO)

TL;DR
This study reconstructs local galaxy star formation histories to compare with the cosmic SFRD, revealing discrepancies that suggest large-scale inhomogeneities in the universe's matter distribution.
Contribution
It provides a novel analysis of local galaxy SFHs and their inconsistency with the global Lilly-Madau plot, implying potential cosmological matter inhomogeneity.
Findings
Local galaxy SFHs differ from the Lilly-Madau plot at z<3
The local SFRD underestimates the global peak by a factor of 2-6
Possible evidence for large-scale matter inhomogeneity in the universe
Abstract
The Lilly-Madau plot is commonly interpreted as the history of the cosmic star formation of the Universe by showing the co-moving star formation rate density (SFRD) over cosmic time. Therefore, the Lilly-Madau plot is sensitive not only to the star formation history (SFH) but also to the number density of galaxies. Assessing the Catalogue of Neighbouring Galaxies, we reconstruct the SFHs of galaxies located in the Local Cosmological Volume (LV) based on delayed- and power-law SFH models. Galaxies with stellar masses of typically evolve according to the delayed- model by having first increasing followed by exponentially declining SFRs, while the majority of less massive star-forming galaxies have an almost constant or increasing SFH. Deducing the cosmic SFRD evolution of the LV reveals that the SFHs of local galaxies are inconsistent…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
