SIMBAD references

2014ApJ...781...34G - Astrophys. J., 781, 34 (2014/January-3)

Slow evolution of the specific star formation rate at z > 2: the impact of dust, emission lines, and a rising star formation history.

GONZALEZ V., BOUWENS R., ILLINGWORTH G., LABBE I., OESCH P., FRANX M. and MAGEE D.

Abstract (from CDS):

We measure the evolution of the specific star formation rate (sSFR = SFR/Mstellar) between redshift 4 and 6 to assess the reported "constant" sSFR at z > 2. We derive stellar masses and star formation rates (SFRs) for a large sample of 750 z ∼ 4-6 galaxies in the GOODS-S field by fitting stellar population models to their spectral energy distributions. Dust extinction is derived from the observed UV colors. We evaluate different star formation histories (SFHs, constant and rising with time) and the impact of optical emission lines. The SFR and Mstellar values are insensitive to whether the SFH is constant or rising. The derived sSFR is very similar (within 0.1 dex) in two Mstellarbins centered at 1 and 5x109 M. The effect of emission lines was, however, quite pronounced. Assuming no contribution from emission lines, the sSFR for galaxies at 5x109 Mevolves weakly at z > 2 (sSFR(z)∝(1 + z)0.6±0.1), consistent with previous results. When emission lines are included in the rest-frame optical bands, consistent with the observed Infrared Array Camera [3.6] and [4.5] fluxes, the sSFR shows higher values at high redshift following sSFR(z)∝(1 + z)1.0±0.1, i.e., the best-fit evolution shows a sSFR ∼2.3xhigher at z ∼ 6 than at z ∼ 2. This is, however, a substantially weaker trend than that found at z < 2 and even than that expected from current models for z > 2 (sSFR(z)∝(1 + z)2.5). Even accounting for emission lines, the observed sSFR(z) trends at z > 2 are still in tension with theoretical expectations.

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Journal keyword(s): galaxies: evolution - galaxies: high-redshift

Simbad objects: 2

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