Early galaxy formation and its large-scale effects

Pratika Dayal*, Andrea Ferrara

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

320 Citations (Scopus)
878 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Galaxy formation is at the heart of our understanding of cosmic evolution. Although there is a consensus that galaxies emerged from the expanding matter background by gravitational instability of primordial fluctuations, a number of additional physical processes must be understood and implemented in theoretical models before these can be reliably used to interpret observations. In parallel, the astonishing recent progresses made in detecting galaxies that formed only a few hundreds of million years after the Big Bang is pushing the quest for more sophisticated and detailed studies of early structures. In this review, we combine the information gleaned from different theoretical models/studies to build a coherent picture of the Universe in its early stages which includes the physics of galaxy formation along with the impact that early structures had on large-scale processes as cosmic reionization and metal enrichment of the intergalactic medium.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1-64
Number of pages64
JournalPhysics Reports
Volume780
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 5-Dec-2018

Keywords

  • High-Redshift
  • Intergalactic medium
  • Galaxy formation
  • First stars
  • Reionization
  • Cosmology theory
  • LY-ALPHA-EMITTERS
  • COLD DARK-MATTER
  • LYMAN-BREAK GALAXIES
  • STAR-FORMING GALAXIES
  • HIGH-REDSHIFT GALAXIES
  • ULTRAVIOLET LUMINOSITY DENSITY
  • HUBBLE-SPACE-TELESCOPE
  • POPULATION-III STARS
  • 1ST BILLION YEARS
  • ULTRA-DEEP FIELD

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