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The VLA-COSMOS 3 GHz Large Project: Evolution of specific star formation rates out to $z\sim5$

Authors :
Leslie, Sarah
Schinnerer, Eva
Liu, Daizhong
Magnelli, Benjamin
Algera, Hiddo
Karim, Alexander
Davidzon, Iary
Gozaliasl, Ghassem
Jiménez-Andrade, Eric F.
Lang, Philipp
Sargent, Mark
Novak, Mladen
Groves, Brent
Smolčić, Vernesa
Zamorani, Giovanni
Vaccari, Mattia
Battisti, Andrew
Vardoulaki, Eleni
Peng, Yingjie
Kartaltepe, Jeyhan
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

We provide a coherent, uniform measurement of the evolution of the logarithmic star formation rate (SFR) - stellar mass ($M_*$) relation, called the main sequence of star-forming galaxies (MS), for galaxies out to $z\sim5$. We measure the MS using mean stacks of 3 GHz radio continuum images to derive average SFRs for $\sim$200,000 mass-selected galaxies at $z>0.3$ in the COSMOS field. We describe the MS relation adopting a new model that incorporates a linear relation at low stellar mass (log($M_*$/M$_\odot$)$<$10) and a flattening at high stellar mass that becomes more prominent at low redshift ($z<1.5$). We find that the SFR density peaks at $1.5<z<2$ and at each epoch there is a characteristic stellar mass ($M_* = 1 - 4 \times 10^{10}\mathrm{M}_\odot$) that contributes the most to the overall SFR density. This characteristic mass increases with redshift, at least to $z\sim2.5$. We find no significant evidence for variations in the MS relation for galaxies in different environments traced by the galaxy number density at $0.3<z<3$, nor for galaxies in X-ray groups at $z\sim0.75$. We confirm that massive bulge-dominated galaxies have lower SFRs than disk-dominated galaxies at a fixed stellar mass at $z<1.2$. As a consequence, the increase in bulge-dominated galaxies in the local star-forming population leads to a flattening of the MS at high stellar masses. This indicates that "mass-quenching" is linked with changes in the morphological composition of galaxies at a fixed stellar mass.<br />Comment: 48 pages (main paper 25 pages, 15 figures). Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2006.13937
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/aba044