The z = 9.625 Cosmic Gems Galaxy was a "Compact Blue Monster" Propelled by Massive Star Clusters
E. Vanzella, M. Messa, A. Adamo, F. Loiacono, M. Oguri, K. Sharon, L. D. Bradley, P. Bergamini, M. Meneghetti, A. Claeyssens, B. Welch, M. Bradac, A. Zanella, A. Bolamperti, F. Calura, T. Y-Y. Hsiao, E. Zackrisson, M. Ricotti, L. Christensen, J. M. Diego, F. E. Bauer, X. Xu

TL;DR
This study investigates the formation of massive star clusters in a high-redshift galaxy, suggesting that an extremely high star cluster formation efficiency and specific physical conditions explain the galaxy's rapid star formation and dense stellar environment.
Contribution
It introduces a model combining a modified stellar cluster mass function with high formation efficiency to explain early galaxy star cluster formation at z=9.625.
Findings
The galaxy's stellar mass is approximately 3.5 x 10^7 Msun.
Star formation rate in the recent past exceeds 25 Gyr$^{-1}$.
The galaxy's luminosity approaches the 'blue monster' regime.
Abstract
The recent discovery of five massive stellar clusters at z=9.625 in the Cosmic Gems has raised the question about the formation mechanism of star clusters in the first half Gyr after the Big-Bang. We infer the total stellar mass in clusters by normalizing and integrating the stellar cluster mass function (SCMF, dn(M)/dM ~ (n) ), assuming three different slopes = -1.5, -2.0 and -2.5 and different lower-mass limits between and Msun. The total integrated cluster stellar mass is compared to the stellar mass inferred from the counter-image of the Cosmic Gems, which provides the best, modestly magnified ( = 1.840.05) representation of the entire galaxy. The delensed stellar mass of the Cosmic Gems galaxy is estimated as 3.5 x Msun, with an effective radius of Reff = 103 parsec and a stellar surface mass density…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
