posted on 2024-07-26, 14:22authored byChuanwu Liu, Simon J. Mutch, Gregory B. Poole, P. W. Angel, Alan DuffyAlan Duffy, Paul M. Geil, Andrei Mesinger, J. Stuart B Wyithe
We investigate high-redshift galaxy sizes using a semi-analytic model constructed for the Darkages Reionization And Galaxy-formation Observables from Numerical Simulation project. Our fiducial model, including strong feedback from supernovae and photoionization background, accurately reproduces the evolution of the stellarmass function and ultraviolet (UV) luminosity function. Using this model, we study the size-luminosity relation of galaxies and find that the effective radius scales with UV luminosity as Re ∝ L0.25 at z ~ 5-9. We show that recently discovered very luminous galaxies at z ~ 7 and 11 lie on our predicted size-luminosity relations. We find that a significant fraction of galaxies at z > 8 will not be resolved by James Webb Space Telescope, but Giant Magellan Telescope will have the ability to resolve all galaxies in haloes above the atomic cooling limit.We show that our fiducial model successfully reproduces the redshift evolution of average galaxy sizes at z > 5. We also explore galaxy sizes in models without supernova feedback. The no-supernova feedback models produce galaxy sizes that are smaller than observations.We therefore confirm that supernova feedback plays an important role in determining the size-luminosity relation of galaxies and its redshift evolution during reionization.
Funding
Distant horizons: understanding the first galaxies in the universe