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The ALPINE-ALMA [CII] Survey: Unveiling the baryon evolution in the ISM of $z\sim5$ star-forming galaxies

Authors :
Sawant, P.
Nanni, A.
Romano, M.
Donevski, D.
Bruzual, G.
Ysard, N.
Lemaux, B. C.
Inami, H.
Calura, F.
Pozzi, F.
Małek, K.
Junais
Boquien, M.
Faisst, A. L.
Hamed, M.
Ginolfi, M.
Zamorani, G.
Lorenzon, G.
Molina, J.
Bardelli, S.
Ibar, E.
Vergani, D.
Di Cesare, C.
Béthermin, M.
Burgarella, D.
Cassata, P.
Dessauges-Zavadsky, M.
D'Onghia, E.
Dubois, Y.
Magdis, G. E.
Mendez-Hernandez, H.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Recent observations reveal a rapid dust build-up in high-redshift galaxies (z > 4), challenging current models of galaxy formation. While our understanding of dust production and destruction in the interstellar medium (ISM) is advancing, probing baryonic processes in the early Universe remains a complex task. We characterize the evolution of 98 z~5 star-forming galaxies observed as part of the ALPINE survey by constraining the physical processes underpinning the gas and dust production, consumption, and destruction in their ISM. We make use of chemical evolution models to simultaneously reproduce the observed dust and gas content. For each galaxy, we estimate initial gas mass, inflows and outflows, and efficiencies of dust growth and destruction. We test the models with the canonical Chabrier and top-heavy initial mass functions (IMFs), with the latter enabling rapid dust production on shorter timescales. Our models successfully reproduce gas and dust content in older galaxies (> 600 Myr) regardless of the IMF, with Type II SNe as the primary dust source and no dust growth in ISM with moderate inflow of primordial gas. In case of intermediate-age galaxies (300 - 600 Myr), we reproduce the gas and dust content through Type II SNe and dust growth in ISM, though we observe an over-prediction of dust mass in older galaxies, potentially indicating an unaccounted dust destruction mechanism and/or an overestimation of the observed dust masses. The number of young galaxies (< 300 Myr) reproduced, increases for models assuming top-heavy IMF but with maximal prescriptions of dust production. Galactic outflows are necessary to reproduce observed gas and dust masses. The Chabrier IMF models reproduce 65% of galaxies, while top-heavy IMF models improve this to 93%, easing tensions with observations. Upcoming JWST data will refine these models by resolving degeneracies in intrinsic galaxy properties.<br />Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2412.02505
Document Type :
Working Paper