The ALPINE-ALMA [CII] Survey: Unveiling the baryon evolution in the ISM of $z\sim5$ star-forming galaxies
P. Sawant, A. Nanni, M. Romano, D. Donevski, G. Bruzual, N. Ysard, B., C. Lemaux, H. Inami, F. Calura, F. Pozzi, K. Ma{\l}ek, Junais, M. Boquien, A., L. Faisst, M. Hamed, M. Ginolfi, G. Zamorani, G. Lorenzon, J. Molina, S., Bardelli, E. Ibar, D. Vergani, C. Di Cesare

TL;DR
This study uses chemical evolution models to analyze 98 z~5 star-forming galaxies from the ALPINE survey, revealing the roles of supernovae, dust growth, and inflows in early galaxy evolution, with implications for IMF assumptions.
Contribution
It introduces detailed chemical evolution models tailored to high-redshift galaxies, testing different IMFs and dust processes to match observed gas and dust content.
Findings
Type II SNe are primary dust sources in older galaxies.
Top-heavy IMF models better reproduce observed galaxy properties.
Galactic outflows are essential to match observed gas and dust masses.
Abstract
Recent observations reveal a rapid dust build-up in high-redshift galaxies (z > 4), challenging current models of galaxy formation. While our understanding of dust production and destruction in the interstellar medium (ISM) is advancing, probing baryonic processes in the early Universe remains a complex task. We characterize the evolution of 98 z~5 star-forming galaxies observed as part of the ALPINE survey by constraining the physical processes underpinning the gas and dust production, consumption, and destruction in their ISM. We make use of chemical evolution models to simultaneously reproduce the observed dust and gas content. For each galaxy, we estimate initial gas mass, inflows and outflows, and efficiencies of dust growth and destruction. We test the models with the canonical Chabrier and top-heavy initial mass functions (IMFs), with the latter enabling rapid dust production on…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Scientific Research and Discoveries
