Cosmic wallflowers: the circumgalactic origins of isolated ultra-compact star clusters at $z>7$
Floor van Donkelaar, Lucio Mayer, Pedro R. Capelo, Debora Sijacki, Angela Adamo

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations to explore how ultra-compact star clusters form in the circumgalactic medium at high redshift, revealing a new formation pathway outside galactic discs.
Contribution
It demonstrates that massive star clusters can efficiently form in circumgalactic filaments at early times, potentially hosting intermediate-mass black holes and linking early clusters to present-day globular clusters.
Findings
Star clusters form rapidly in circumgalactic filaments with densities matching JWST observations.
Some clusters could host intermediate-mass black holes due to extreme stellar densities.
Formation in the circumgalactic medium offers an alternative pathway to in-disc cluster formation.
Abstract
The discovery of gravitationally lensed stellar clusters at high redshift with the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) has revealed extremely compact, massive star-forming systems in galaxies at , providing a new window into early cluster formation. In this work, we investigate star cluster formation in the circumgalactic environments of gas-rich galaxies with stellar masses spanning between - M at , using the MassiveBlackPS cosmological hydrodynamical simulation with 2 pc resolution. We identify 55 baryon-dominated clusters forming outside galactic discs but within the virial radius of the primary halo. Star formation in these systems proceeds rapidly, reaching peak stellar surface densities above M pc, closely matching the compact clusters recently discovered by JWST in the lensed Cosmic Gems Arc at $z \approx…
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