Abstract
Recent studies have reported tension between the presence of luminous, high-redshift galaxies and the halo mass functions predicted by standard cosmology. Here, an improved test is proposed using the presence of high-redshift Balmer breaks to probe the formation of early 10 4 –10 5 M ⊙ baryonic minihalos. Unlike previous tests, this does not depend upon the mass-to-light ratio and has only a slight dependence upon the metallicity, stellar initial mass function, and star formation history, which are all weakly constrained at high redshift. We show that the strongest Balmer breaks allowed at z = 9 using the simplest ΛCDM cosmological model would allow a D 4000 as high as 1.26 under idealized circumstances and D 4000 ≤ 1.14 including realistic feedback models. Since current photometric template fitting to JWST sources infers the existence of stronger Balmer breaks out to z ≳ 11, upcoming spectroscopic follow-up will either demonstrate those templates are invalid at high redshift or imply new physics beyond “vanilla” ΛCDM.
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CITATION STYLE
Steinhardt, C. L., Sneppen, A., Clausen, T., Katz, H., Rey, M. P., & Stahlschmidt, J. (2024). The Highest-redshift Balmer Breaks as a Test of ΛCDM. The Astrophysical Journal, 967(2), 172. https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ad3afb
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