4.7 Article

High-redshift star formation rate up to z ∼ 8.3 derived from gamma-ray bursts and influence of background cosmology

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 400, Issue 1, Pages L10-L14

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1111/j.1745-3933.2009.00751.x

Keywords

stars: formation; gamma-rays: bursts

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [10233010, 10221001, 10873009]
  2. National Basic Research Programme of China (973 programmes) [2007CB815404]
  3. Jiangsu Project Innovation for PhD candidates [CX07B-039z]

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The high-redshift star formation rate (SFR) is difficult to measure directly even by modern approaches. Long-duration gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) can be detected to the edge of the visible universe because of their high luminosities. The collapsar model of long GRBs indicates that they may trace the star formation history. So, long GRBs may be a useful tool of measuring the high-redshift SFR. Observations show that long GRBs prefer to form in a low-metallicity environment. We study the high-redshift SFR up to z similar to 8.3 considering the Swift GRBs tracing the star formation history and the cosmic metallicity evolution in different background cosmological models including Lambda cold dark matter (Lambda CDM), quintessence, quintessence with a time-varying equation of state and brane-world model. We use latest Swift GRBs including two highest-z GRBs, GRB 080913 at z = 6.7 and GRB 090423 at z = 8.3. We find that the SFR at z > 4 shows a steep decay with a slope of similar to-5.0 in Lambda CDM. In the other three models, the high-redshift SFR is slightly different from Lambda CDM model and also shows a steep decay.

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