The Evolution of the Fractions of Quiescent and Star-forming Galaxies as a Function of Stellar Mass Since z=3: Increasing Importance of Massive, Dusty Star-forming Galaxies in the Early Universe [GA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/1606.04090


Using the UltraVISTA DR1 and 3D-HST catalogs, we construct a stellar-mass-complete sample, unique for its combination of surveyed volume and depth, to study the evolution of the fractions of quiescent galaxies, moderately unobscured star-forming galaxies, and dusty star-forming galaxies as a function of stellar mass over the redshift interval $0.2 \le z \le 3.0$. We show that the role of dusty star-forming galaxies within the overall galaxy population becomes more important with increasing stellar mass, and grows rapidly with increasing redshift. Specifically, dusty star-forming galaxies dominate the galaxy population with $\log{(M_{\rm star}/M_{\odot})} \gtrsim 10.3$ at $z\gtrsim2$. The ratio of dusty and non-dusty star-forming galaxies as a function of stellar mass changes little with redshift. Dusty star-forming galaxies dominate the star-forming population at $\log{(M_{\rm star}/M_{\odot})} \gtrsim 10.0-10.5$, being a factor of $\sim$3-5 more common, while unobscured star-forming galaxies dominate at $\log{(M_{\rm star}/M_{\odot})} \lesssim 10$. At $\log{(M_{\rm star}/M_{\odot})} > 10.5$, red galaxies dominate the galaxy population at all redshift $z<3$, either because they are quiescent (at late times) or dusty star-forming (in the early universe).

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N. Martis, D. Marchesini, G. Brammer, et. al.
Tue, 14 Jun 16
7/67

Comments: 7 pages, 4 figures, 1 table. Submitted to ApJ Letters