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One of the main challenges in galaxy formation that has emerged recently is the early assembly of massive galaxies. The observed number density and the maximum stellar mass (M_) of massive galaxies in the early Universe appear to be higher than model predictions, which may pose a serious problem to the LCDM cosmology. A major limitation in many previous studies is the large uncertainty in estimating M_ due to the lack of constraints in the rest-frame near-infrared part of the spectral energy distribution, which is critical to determining M_ accurately. Here we use data from a large JWST/MIRI survey in the PRIMER program to carry out a systematic analysis of massive galaxies at z 3-8, leveraging photometric constraints at rest-frame 1 m. We find a significant reduction in the number and mass densities of massive galaxies at z > 5 compared to earlier results that did not use the MIRI photometry. Within the standard CDM cosmology, our results require a moderate increase in the baryon-to-star conversion efficiency () towards higher redshifts and higher M_. For the most massive galaxies at z 8, the required is 0. 3, in comparison to 0. 14 for typical low-redshift galaxies. Our findings are consistent with models assuming suppressed stellar feedback due to the high gas density and the associated short free-fall time expected for massive halos at high redshift.
Wang et al. (Mon,) studied this question.