4.7 Review

The first galaxies: signatures of the initial starburst

Journal

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2966.2009.15158.x

Keywords

H II regions; galaxies: formation; cosmology: theory; early Universe; ultraviolet: galaxies

Funding

  1. NSF [AST-0708795]
  2. NASA ATFP [NNX08AL43G]
  3. Excellence Initiative of the German Government [GSC 129/1]
  4. German Science Foundation (DFG) [KL 1358/1]
  5. DFG [SFB 439]
  6. NASA [99189, NNX08AL43G] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

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Detection of the radiation emitted from the first galaxies at z >= 10 will be made possible in the next decade, with the launch of the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST). We carry Out cosmological radiation hydrodynamics simulations of Population III (Pop III) starbursts in a 10(8) M-circle dot dwarf galaxy at z similar to 12.5. For different star formation efficiencies and stellar initial mass functions (IMFs), we calculate the luminosities and equivalent widths (EWs) of the recombination lines H alpha, Ly alpha. and He II lambda 1640, under the simple assumption that the stellar population does not evolve over the first similar to 3 Myr of the starburst. Although only less than or similar to 40 per cent of the gas in the central 100 pc of the galaxy is photoionized, we find that photoheating by massive stars causes a strong dynamical response, which results in a weak correlation between luminosity emitted in hydrogen recombination lines and the total mass in stars. However, owing to the low escape fraction of He II-ionizing photons, the luminosity emitted in He II lambda 1640 is much more strongly correlated with the total stellar mass. The ratio of the luminosity in He II lambda 1640 to that in Ly alpha or H alpha is it complex function of the density field and the star formation rate, but is found to be a good indicator of the IMF in many cases. The ratio of observable fluxes is F lambda(1640)/F-H alpha similar to 1 for clusters of 100 M-circle dot Pop III stars and F lambda(1640)/F-H alpha similar to 1 for clusters of 25 M-circle dot Pop III stars. The EW of the He II lambda 1640 emission line is the most reliable IMF indicator, its value varying between similar to 20 and similar to 200 AA for a massive and very massive Pop III IMF, respectively. Even the bright, initial stages of Pop III starbursts in the first dwarf galaxies will likely not be directly detectable by the JWST, except in cases where the flux from these galaxies is strongly magnified through gravitational lensing. Instead, the JWST may discover already more massive, and hence more chemically evolved, galaxies in which primordial star formation has largely ceased, or is contaminated with more normal, Pop I/II, star formation.

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