Interpreting the first quiescent dwarf galaxy

The surprising JWST discovery of a quiescent, low-mass (M⋆ = 108.7M) galaxy at redshift z = 7.3 (JADES-GS-z7-01-QU) represents a unique opportunity to study the imprint of feedback processes on early galaxy evolution. We build a sample of 130 low-mass (M⋆ 􏰁 109.5M) galaxies from the serra cosmological zoom-in simulations, which show a feedback-regulated, bursty star formation history (SFH). The fraction of time spent in an active phase increases with the stellar mass from fduty ≈ 0.6 at M⋆ ≈ 107.5M to ≈ 0.99 at M⋆ ≥ 109M, and it is in agreement with the value fduty ≈ 0.75 estimated for JADES-GS-z7-01-QU. On average, 30% of the galaxies are quiescent in the range 6 < z < 8.4; they become the dominant population at M⋆ 􏰁 108.3M⊙. However, none of these quiescent systems matches the Spectral Energy Distribution of JADES-GS-z7-01-QU, unless their SFH is artificially truncated a few Myr after the main star formation peak. As supernova feedback can only act on a longer timescale (􏰀30 Myr), this implies that the observed abrupt quenching must be caused by a faster physical mechanism, such as radiation-driven winds.

Gelli, Salvadori, Ferrara, Pallottini, and Carniani submitted to ApJ Letter