The Stellar Mass and Age Distributions of Star-Forming Clumps at 0.5 < z < 5 in JWST CANUCS: Implications for Clump Formation and Destruction

Abstract

We investigate the resolved properties of star-forming clumps and their host galaxies at 0.5<z<5 in the JWST CANUCS fields. We find that the fraction of clumpy galaxies peaks near z2 for galaxies with masses of (Mg,*/M)≥10, while galaxies with masses of 8.5 ≤ (Mg,*/M) < 10 show lower clumpy fractions with little redshift evolution. We identify and measure individual clump masses, finding that the aggregated clump stellar mass function (cSMF) follows a power-law slope of α = -2 across all redshift bins, broadly consistent with in-situ clump formation. However, when split by galaxy masses, the cSMF is found to be flatter (α-1.6) for massive galaxies and steeper (α-2.3) for lower mass galaxies, with little redshift evolution in both cases. We explore how different formation mechanisms and disruptive processes affect the shape of the clump mass function. In particular, we find that the cSMF slope is flatter with increasing gas fractions in younger clump populations (<300 Myr old), suggesting that higher gas availability leads to more massive clumps forming at the time of formation. Alternatively, many high-redshift galaxies in the sample have disturbed morphologies and simulations show that clumps of ex-situ origins can flatten the cSMF slope. We also investigate the evolution of clump populations, where we find the cSMF slope become flatter as clumps evolve and age. We interpret this as an indication of the long-term survivability of massive clumps, with feedback mechanisms preferentially disrupting low-mass clumps. Overall, the galaxy-mass dependent cSMF and age distribution point to a complex history for clumps, involving different and competing mechanisms for their formation and destruction.

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