The increasing number of distant galaxies observed with ALMA by the ALPINE and REBELS surveys and the early release observations of the JWST promise to revolutionize our understanding of cosmic star formation and the assembly of normal, dusty galaxies. Here, we introduce a new suite of cosmological simulations performed with dustyGadget to interpret high-redshift data. We investigate the comoving star formation history, the stellar mass density, and a number of galaxy scaling relations such as the galaxy main sequence, the stellar-to-halo mass, and dust-to-stellar mass relations at z > 4. The predicted star formation rate and total stellar mass density rapidly increase in time with a remarkable agreement with available observations, including recent JWST ERO and DD-ERS data at z >= 8. A well-defined galaxy main sequence is found already at z < 10, following a non-evolving power-law, which - if extrapolated at high-mass end - is in agreement with JWST, REBELS, and ALPINE data. This is consistent with a star formation efficiently sustained by gas accretion and a specific star formation rate increasing with redshift, as established by recent observations. A population of low-mass galaxies (8 < Log(M-star/M-circle dot) < 9) at z <= 6 - 7 that exceeds some of the current estimates of the stellar mass function is also at the origin of the scatter in the stellar-to-halo mass relation. Future JWST observations will provide invaluable constraints on these low-mass galaxies, helping to shed light on their role in cosmic evolution.
The assembly of dusty galaxies at z ≥ 4: the build-up of stellar mass and its scaling relations with hints from early JWST data / C Di Cesare; L Graziani; R Schneider; M Ginolfi; A Venditti; P Santini; L K Hunt. - In: MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY. - ISSN 0035-8711. - ELETTRONICO. - 519:(2023), pp. 4632-4650. [10.1093/mnras/stac3702]
The assembly of dusty galaxies at z ≥ 4: the build-up of stellar mass and its scaling relations with hints from early JWST data
M Ginolfi;
2023
Abstract
The increasing number of distant galaxies observed with ALMA by the ALPINE and REBELS surveys and the early release observations of the JWST promise to revolutionize our understanding of cosmic star formation and the assembly of normal, dusty galaxies. Here, we introduce a new suite of cosmological simulations performed with dustyGadget to interpret high-redshift data. We investigate the comoving star formation history, the stellar mass density, and a number of galaxy scaling relations such as the galaxy main sequence, the stellar-to-halo mass, and dust-to-stellar mass relations at z > 4. The predicted star formation rate and total stellar mass density rapidly increase in time with a remarkable agreement with available observations, including recent JWST ERO and DD-ERS data at z >= 8. A well-defined galaxy main sequence is found already at z < 10, following a non-evolving power-law, which - if extrapolated at high-mass end - is in agreement with JWST, REBELS, and ALPINE data. This is consistent with a star formation efficiently sustained by gas accretion and a specific star formation rate increasing with redshift, as established by recent observations. A population of low-mass galaxies (8 < Log(M-star/M-circle dot) < 9) at z <= 6 - 7 that exceeds some of the current estimates of the stellar mass function is also at the origin of the scatter in the stellar-to-halo mass relation. Future JWST observations will provide invaluable constraints on these low-mass galaxies, helping to shed light on their role in cosmic evolution.I documenti in FLORE sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.