HALO MASS FUNCTIONS AT HIGH REDSHIFT

  • Hannah O’brennan
  • , John A. Regan
  • , Chris Power
  • , Saoirse Ward
  • , John Brennan
  • , Joe McCaffrey

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Recent JWST observations of very early galaxies, at z ≳ 10, have led to claims that tension exists between the sizes and luminosities of high-redshift galaxies and what is predicted by standard ΛCDM models. Here we use the adaptive mesh refinement code Enzo and the N-body smoothed particle hydrodynamics code SWIFT to compare (semi-)analytic halo mass functions against the results of direct N-body models at high redshift. In particular, our goal is to investigate the variance between standard halo mass functions derived from (semi-)analytic formulations and N-body calculations and to determine what role any discrepancy may play in driving tensions between observations and theory. We find that the difference between direct N-body calculations and (semi-) analytic halo mass function fits is less than a factor of 2 (at z ∼ 10) within the mass range of galaxies currently being observed by JWST, and is therefore not a dominant source of error when comparing theory and observation at high redshift.

Original languageEnglish
Number of pages11
JournalThe Open Journal of Astrophysics
Volume7
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 14 Nov 2024

Funding

FundersFunder number
ARC Australian Research Council CE170100013

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