4.7 Article

Faint Lyman-break galaxies as a crucial test for galaxy formation models

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 399, Issue 2, Pages 827-841

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2966.2009.15316.x

Keywords

galaxies: evolution; galaxies: formation

Funding

  1. University of Trieste [ASI/COFINI/016/07/0, PRIN INAF 2007]
  2. CINECA, Bologna

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It has recently been shown that galaxy formation models within the Lambda cold dark matter cosmology predict that, compared to the observed population, small galaxies (with stellar masses < 1011 M-circle dot) form too early, are too passive since z similar to 3 and host too old stellar populations at z = 0. We then expect an overproduction of small galaxies at z greater than or similar to 4 that should be visible as an excess of faint Lyman-break galaxies. To check whether this excess is present, we use the morgana galaxy formation model and grasil spectrophotometric + radiative transfer code to generate mock catalogues of deep fields observed with Hubble Space Telescope Advanced Camera for Surveys. We add observational noise and the effect of Lyman alpha emission, and perform colour-colour selections to identify Lyman-break galaxies. The resulting mock candidates have plausible properties that closely resemble those of observed galaxies. We are able to reproduce the evolution of the bright tail of the luminosity function of Lyman-break galaxies (with a possible underestimate of the number of the brightest i-dropouts), but uncertainties and degeneracies in dust absorption parameters do not allow to give strong constraints to the model. Besides, our model shows a clear excess with respect to observations of faint Lyman-break galaxies, especially of z(850) similar to 27V-dropouts at z similar to 5. We quantify the properties of these 'excess' galaxies and discuss the implications: these galaxies are hosted in dark matter haloes with circular velocities in excess of 100 km s-1, and their suppression may require a deep rethinking of stellar feedback processes taking place in galaxy formation.

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