Star Cluster Formation and Survival in the First Galaxies [GA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/2212.13946


Using radiation-hydrodynamic cosmological simulations, we present a detailed ($0.1$ pc resolution), physically motivated portrait of a typical-mass dwarf galaxy before the epoch of reionization, resolving the formation and evolution of star clusters into individual $10:\mathrm{M_{\odot}}$ star particles. In the rest-frame UV, the galaxy has an irregular morphology with no bulge or galactic disk, dominated by light emitted from numerous, compact, and gravitationally-bound star clusters. This is especially interesting in light of recent HST and JWST observations that — aided by the magnifying power of gravitational lenses — have imaged, at parsec-scale resolution, individual young star clusters in the process of forming in similar galaxies at $z>6$. Because of their low metallicities and high temperatures, star-forming gas clouds in this galaxy have densities $\sim 100$ times higher than typical giant molecular clouds; hence, their star formation efficiencies are high enough ($f_\sim10-70$ per cent) to produce a sizeable population of potential globular cluster progenitors but typically smaller (between a few $100:-: 2\times10^4:\mathrm{M_{\odot}}$, sizes of $0.1-3$ pc) and of lower metallicities ($10^{-3.5}-10^{-2.5}:\mathrm{Z_{\odot}}$). The initial mass function of the star-forming clouds is log-normal while the bound star cluster mass function is a power-law with a slope that depends mainly on $f_$ but also on the temporal proximity to a major starburst. We find slopes between $-0.5$ and $-2.5$ depending on the assumed sub-grid $f_$. Star formation is self-regulated on galactic scales; however, the multi-modal metallicity distribution of the star clusters and the fraction of stars locked into surviving bound star clusters depends on $f_$.

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F. Garcia, M. Ricotti, K. Sugimura, et. al.
Thu, 29 Dec 22
5/47

Comments: 20 pages, 15 figures, submitted to MNRAS. See this https URL for movie renders