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Bursty star formation and galaxy-galaxy interactions in low-mass galaxies 1 Gyr after the Big Bang

Authors :
Asada, Yoshihisa
Sawicki, Marcin
Abraham, Roberto
Bradač, Maruša
Brammer, Gabriel
Desprez, Guillaume
Estrada-Carpenter, Vince
Iyer, Kartheik
Martis, Nicholas
Matharu, Jasleen
Mowla, Lamiya
Muzzin, Adam
Noirot, Gaël
Sarrouh, Ghassan T. E.
Strait, Victoria
Willott, Chris J.
Harshan, Anishya
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

We use CANUCS JWST/NIRCam imaging of galaxies behind the gravitationally-lensing cluster MACS J0417.5-1154 to investigate star formation burstiness in low-mass ($M_\star\sim10^8\ M_\odot$) galaxies at $z\sim4.7-6.5$. Our sample of 123 galaxies is selected using the Lyman break selection and photometric emission-line excess methods. Sixty per cent of the 123 galaxies in this sample have H$\alpha$-to-UV flux ratios that deviate significantly from the range of $\eta_{1500}$ values consistent with smooth and steady star formation histories. This large fraction indicates that the majority of low-mass galaxies is experiencing bursty star formation histories at high redshift. We also searched for interacting galaxies in our sample and found that they are remarkably common ($\sim40$ per cent of the sample). Compared to non-interacting galaxies, interacting galaxies are more likely to have very low H$\alpha$-to-UV ratios, suggesting that galaxy-galaxy interactions enhance star formation burstiness and enable faster quenching (with timescales of $\lesssim100$ Myr) that follows the rapid rise of star formation activity. Given the high frequency of galaxy-galaxy interactions and the rapid SFR fluctuations they appear to cause, we conclude that galaxy-galaxy interactions could be a leading cause of bursty star formation in low-mass, high-$z$ galaxies. They could thus play a significant role in the evolution of the galaxy population at early cosmological times.<br />Comment: 20 pages, 15 figures, and 1 table. Accepted for publication in MNRAS

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2310.02314
Document Type :
Working Paper