New constraints on stellar feedback through [O III] emission: interpreting ALMA and JWST observations with SPICE simulations
Benedetta Casavecchia, Aniket Bhagwat, Benedetta Ciardi, Celine Peroux, Tiago Costa

TL;DR
This study models [OIII] emission in high-redshift galaxies using SPICE simulations with different supernova feedback prescriptions, revealing how feedback influences metal enrichment, gas ionization, and galaxy morphology during the Epoch of Reionization.
Contribution
We developed a post-processing pipeline for [OIII] emission within SPICE simulations, comparing three supernova feedback models to understand their effects on galaxy properties at z > 6.
Findings
Bursty-sn model ionizes gas efficiently but enriches less, resulting in fewer bright [OIII] emitters.
Both bursty-sn and hyper-sn models suppress [OIII] luminosity functions.
Smooth-sn produces more compact galaxies with higher V/σ ratios.
Abstract
ALMA and JWST have recently detected emission lines from the interstellar medium of star-forming galaxies during the Epoch of Reionization, reaching redshifts up to z = 14. Among these, [OIII] lines provide a powerful diagnostic of metal enrichment, gas ionization, and the impact of stellar feedback in galaxies at z > 6. Modeling this emission in cosmological simulations is challenging due to the wide range of spatial scales and physical processes involved. To address this, we have developed a post-processing pipeline that implements a sub-grid model for [OIII] line emission within the SPICE radiation-hydrodynamical simulations. These simulations explore three supernova feedback prescriptions: bursty-sn, smooth-sn, and the hypernova-based hyper-sn. We investigate how these feedback models affect metal enrichment, the neutral gas fraction, and the size and morphology of ionized halos…
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