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Temporal Self-Organization in Galaxy Formation
We report on the discovery of a relation between the number of star formation
(SF) peaks per unit time, , and the size of the temporal
smoothing window function, , used to define the peaks: (). This relation holds over the
range of to Myr that can be reliably computed, using a
large sample of galaxies obtained from a state-of-the-art cosmological
hydrodynamic simulation. This means that the temporal distribution of SF peaks
in galaxies as a population is fractal with a Hausdorff fractal dimension equal
to . This finding reveals, for the first time, that the superficially
chaotic process of galaxy formation is underlined by a temporal
self-organization up to at least one gigayear. It is tempting to suggest that,
given the known existence of spatial fractals (such as the power-law two-point
function of galaxies), there is a joint spatio-temporal self-organization in
galaxy formation. From an observational perspective, it will be urgent to
devise diagnostics to probe SF histories of galaxies with good temporal
resolution to facilitate a test of this prediction. If confirmed, it would
provide unambiguous evidence for a new picture of galaxy formation that is
interaction driven, cooperative and coherent in and between time and space.
Unravelling its origin may hold the key to understanding galaxy formation.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, ApJ Letters in press, comments always welcom
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