Protoclusters as Drivers of Stellar Mass Growth in the Early Universe, a Case Study: Taralay -- a Massive Protocluster at z ~ 4.57
Priti Staab, Brian C. Lemaux, Ben Forrest, Ekta Shah, Olga Cucciati,, Lori Lubin, Roy R. Gal, Denise Hung, Lu Shen, Finn Giddings, Yana Khusanova,, Giovanni Zamorani, Sandro Bardelli, Letizia Pasqua Cassara, Paolo Cassata,, Yi-Kuan Chiang, Yoshinobu Fudamoto, Shuma Fukushima

TL;DR
This study observationally confirms that protoclusters like Taralay significantly contribute to early universe stellar mass growth, showing they are key sites of intense star formation and mass assembly, exceeding some simulation predictions.
Contribution
First observational confirmation that protoclusters drive stellar mass growth in the early universe, with detailed analysis of Taralay at z ~ 4.57.
Findings
Protocluster Taralay has a mass of ~1.7 x 10^{15} M_sun.
Protocluster's star formation rate density exceeds the field by ~12 times.
Protoclusters contribute approximately 33.5% to cosmic SFRD, higher than predicted.
Abstract
Simulations predict that the galaxy populations inhabiting protoclusters may contribute considerably to the total amount of stellar mass growth of galaxies in the early universe. In this study, we test these predictions observationally, focusing on the Taralay protocluster (formerly PCl J1001+0220) at in the COSMOS field. Leveraging data from the Charting Cluster Construction with VUDS and ORELSE (C3VO) survey, we spectroscopically confirmed 44 galaxies within the adopted redshift range of the protocluster () and incorporate an additional 18 such galaxies from ancillary spectroscopic surveys. Using a density mapping technique, we estimate the total mass of Taralay to be M, sufficient to form a massive cluster by the present day. By comparing the star formation rate density (SFRD) within the protocluster (SFRD)…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
