Sub-parsec resolution cosmological simulations of star-forming clumps at high redshift with feedback of individual stars
Abstract
We introduce a new set of zoom-in cosmological simulations with sub-pc resolution, intended to model extremely faint, highly magnified star-forming stellar clumps, detected at z=6.14 thanks to gravitational lensing. The simulations include feedback from individual massive stars (in both the pre-supernova and supernova phases), generated via stochastic, direct sampling of the stellar initial mass function. We adopt a modified 'delayed cooling' feedback scheme, specifically created to prevent artificial radiative loss of the energy injected by individual stars in very dense gas (n~103-105 cm-3). The sites where star formation ignites are characterised by maximum densities of the order of 105 cm-3 and gravitational pressures P/k>107 K/cm3, corresponding to the values of the local, turbulent regions where the densest stellar aggregates form. The total stellar mass at z=6.14 is 3.4x107 Msun, in satisfactory agreement with the observed stellar mass of the observed systems. The most massive clumps have masses of ~106 Msun and half-mass sizes of ~100 pc. These sizes are larger than the observed ones, including also other samples of lensed high-redshift clumps, and imply an average density one order of magnitude lower than the observed one. In the size-mass plane, our clumps populate a sequence that is intermediate between the ones of observed high-redshift clumps and local dSph galaxies.
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