JWST has enabled the detection of the ultraviolet (UV) continuum of galaxies at z > 10, revealing extremely blue, potentially dust-free galaxies. However, interpreting UV spectra is complicated by the well-known degeneracy between stellar ages, dust reddening, and nebular continuum. The main goal of this paper is to develop a theoretical model for the relationship between galaxy UV slopes (beta), bursty star formation histories, dust evolution, and nebular contributions using cosmological zoom-in simulations. We build a layered model where we simulate increasingly complex physics, including the impact of (i) unattenuated intrinsic stellar populations, (ii) reddened populations using a new on-the-fly evolving dust model, and (iii) populations including dust and nebular continuum. Unattenuated stellar populations with no nebular emission exhibit a diverse range of intrinsic UV slopes (beta 0 approximate to -3 -> -2.2), with an inverse correlation between UV slope and specific star formation rate. When including dust, our model galaxies demonstrate a rapid rise in dust obscuration between z approximate to 8 and 10. This increase in dust mass is due to high grain-grain shattering rates, and enhanced growth per unit dust mass in very small grains, resulting in UV-detected galaxies at z similar to 12 descending into Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array-detectable galaxies by z similar to 6. The rapid rise in dust content at z approximate to 8-10 leads to a systematic reddening of the UV slopes during this redshift range. Nebular continuum further reddens UV slopes by a median Delta beta(neb) approximate to 0.2-0.4, though notably the highest-redshift galaxies (z approximate to 12) are insufficiently blue compared to observations; this may imply an evolving escape fraction from H ii regions with redshift.
Narayanan, D., Stark, D.P., Finkelstein, S.L., Torrey, P., Li, Q.i., Cullen, F., et al. (2025). The Ultraviolet Slopes of Early Universe Galaxies: The Impact of Bursty Star Formation, Dust, and Nebular Continuum Emission. THE ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 982(1), 1-16 [10.3847/1538-4357/adb41c].
The Ultraviolet Slopes of Early Universe Galaxies: The Impact of Bursty Star Formation, Dust, and Nebular Continuum Emission
Marinacci, Federico;
2025
Abstract
JWST has enabled the detection of the ultraviolet (UV) continuum of galaxies at z > 10, revealing extremely blue, potentially dust-free galaxies. However, interpreting UV spectra is complicated by the well-known degeneracy between stellar ages, dust reddening, and nebular continuum. The main goal of this paper is to develop a theoretical model for the relationship between galaxy UV slopes (beta), bursty star formation histories, dust evolution, and nebular contributions using cosmological zoom-in simulations. We build a layered model where we simulate increasingly complex physics, including the impact of (i) unattenuated intrinsic stellar populations, (ii) reddened populations using a new on-the-fly evolving dust model, and (iii) populations including dust and nebular continuum. Unattenuated stellar populations with no nebular emission exhibit a diverse range of intrinsic UV slopes (beta 0 approximate to -3 -> -2.2), with an inverse correlation between UV slope and specific star formation rate. When including dust, our model galaxies demonstrate a rapid rise in dust obscuration between z approximate to 8 and 10. This increase in dust mass is due to high grain-grain shattering rates, and enhanced growth per unit dust mass in very small grains, resulting in UV-detected galaxies at z similar to 12 descending into Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array-detectable galaxies by z similar to 6. The rapid rise in dust content at z approximate to 8-10 leads to a systematic reddening of the UV slopes during this redshift range. Nebular continuum further reddens UV slopes by a median Delta beta(neb) approximate to 0.2-0.4, though notably the highest-redshift galaxies (z approximate to 12) are insufficiently blue compared to observations; this may imply an evolving escape fraction from H ii regions with redshift.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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