Resolving galaxy formation in the early Universe with BonFIRE and CampFIRE

Abstract

The abundance and rapid growth of galaxies at cosmic dawn revealed by the James Webb Space Telescope challenges models of galaxy formation, motivating new simulations to uncover the processes driving early galaxy assembly. We present the first results from BonFIRE (L≈40 cMpc, m baryon≈5×104~M) and CampFIRE (L≈5 cMpc, at both m baryon≈800~M and ≈6×103~M), a suite of cosmological hydrodynamic simulations of early galaxy formation (z6) from the Feedback In Realistic Environments (FIRE) project, using the FIRE-3 model. We use a resampling procedure to combine the large statistics of BonFIRE with the higher resolution of CampFIRE and robustly predict galaxy properties over a wide dynamic range (M104-1010~M). Galaxy formation in this suite emerges through clustered, bursty star formation, with halo-scale star formation efficiencies reaching 10-30\% in high-mass halos. A subset of low-mass halos also have surprisingly high efficiencies of 1\% and host ultra-compact galaxies with narrow age spreads. We predict galaxy UV luminosity functions at 9~z25 in broad agreement with observations at M UV-19, with a faint-end turnover at M UV≈-14, but we slightly overpredict the abundance of brighter galaxies. We find that UV luminosity variability in early galaxies is strongly mass-dependent, with halo-to-halo scatter dominating at low masses and contributing comparably to rapid temporal burstiness at M halo1010~M. We also present first results from a simple Pop~III model with a top-heavy IMF, demonstrating broad agreement with independent Pop~III predictions and observational constraints.

0

Turn this paper into a full lesson

ArcXiv compiles a staged curriculum from this paper: 8-12 lessons across beginner → advanced, synthesised section guides, visuals, flashcards, a quiz, exercises, and on-demand deep dives per section. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.

Discussion (0)

Sign in to join the discussion.

Loading comments…