Bursty Star Formation Naturally Explains the Abundance of Bright Galaxies at Cosmic Dawn
Guochao Sun, Claude-Andr\'e Faucher-Gigu\`ere, Christopher C. Hayward,, Xuejian Shen, Andrew Wetzel, Rachel K. Cochrane

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that bursty star formation naturally explains the high abundance of bright galaxies at cosmic dawn, matching observations without requiring non-standard physics or fine-tuning.
Contribution
It shows that bursty star formation in FIRE-2 simulations reproduces the bright end of the UV luminosity function at high redshift without additional modifications.
Findings
Bursty star formation induces order-of-magnitude changes in UV-bright galaxy abundance.
Simulations match observed bright galaxy populations at $z ightarrow 10$.
Predicted UV luminosity densities evolve weakly with redshift, aligning with observations.
Abstract
Recent discoveries of a significant population of bright galaxies at cosmic dawn have enabled critical tests of cosmological galaxy formation models. In particular, the bright end of the galaxy UV luminosity function (UVLF) appears higher than predicted by many models. Using approximately 25,000 galaxy snapshots at in a suite of FIRE-2 cosmological "zoom-in'' simulations from the Feedback in Realistic Environments (FIRE) project, we show that the observed abundance of UV-bright galaxies at cosmic dawn is reproduced in these simulations with a multi-channel implementation of standard stellar feedback processes, without any fine-tuning. Notably, we find no need to invoke previously suggested modifications such as a non-standard cosmology, a top-heavy stellar initial mass function, or a strongly enhanced star formation efficiency. We contrast…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
