Introducing the Phoebos simulation: galaxy properties at the dawn of galaxy formation
Floor van Donkelaar, Pedro R. Capelo, Lucio Mayer, Darren S. Reed, Thomas R. Quinn

TL;DR
The Phoebos simulation models early galaxy formation during cosmic dawn, reproducing key JWST-observed properties and suggesting rapid stellar growth driven by mild feedback, with implications for understanding galaxy evolution.
Contribution
This work introduces the Phoebos hydrodynamical simulation with a novel weak feedback model and multi-phase gas cooling, capturing early galaxy properties more accurately than previous models.
Findings
Reproduces stellar mass function at high redshift
Matches observed size-mass relation slope
Aligns with observed specific star formation rates
Abstract
The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) now allows us to observe galaxies at the end of cosmic dawn () with unprecedented detail, revealing their morphologies, sizes, and internal structures. These observations offer crucial insights into the physical processes driving early galaxy formation. In this work, we introduce the Phoebos hydrodynamical cosmological simulation, a state-of-the-art 100 Mpc volume designed to study the formation and evolution of galaxies at the end of cosmic dawn and into the epoch of reionization. Phoebos includes a stellar feedback model that is intentionally weak, in order to address the high abundance of massive galaxies seen by JWST at early epochs. At variance with most large cosmological hydrodynamical simulations, we do not employ an effective equation of state model, instead our radiative cooling model allows us to capture the multi-phase…
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