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  5. Demonstrating Diversity in Star-formation Histories with the CSI Survey
 

Demonstrating Diversity in Star-formation Histories with the CSI Survey

Journal
THE ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL  
Date Issued
2016
Author(s)
Dressler, Alan
•
Kelson, Daniel D.
•
Abramson, Louis E.
•
Gladders, Michael D.
•
Oemler, Augustus, Jr.
•
POGGIANTI, Bianca Maria  
•
Mulchaey, John S.
•
Vulcani, Benedetta  
•
Shectman, Stephen A.
•
Williams, Rik J.
•
McCarthy, Patrick J.
DOI
10.3847/1538-4357/833/2/251
Abstract
We present coarse but robust star-formation histories (SFHs) derived from spectrophotometric data of the Carnegie-Spitzer-IMACS Survey, for 22,494 galaxies at 0.3\lt z\lt 0.9 with stellar masses of 109 M ☉ to 1012 M ☉. Our study moves beyond “average” SFHs and distribution functions of specific star-formation rates (sSFRs) to individually measured SFHs for tens of thousands of galaxies. By comparing star-formation rates (SFRs) with timescales of {10}10,{10}9, and 108 years, we find a wide diversity of SFHs: “old galaxies” that formed most or all of their stars early, galaxies that formed stars with declining or constant SFRs over a Hubble time, and genuinely “young galaxies” that formed most of their stars since z = 1. This sequence is one of decreasing stellar mass, but remarkably, each type is found over a mass range of a factor of 10. Conversely, galaxies at any given mass follow a wide range of SFHs, leading us to conclude that (1) halo mass does not uniquely determine SFHs, (2) there is no “typical” evolutionary track, and (3) “abundance matching” has limitations as a tool for inferring physics. Our observations imply that SFHs are set at an early epoch, and that—for most galaxies—the decline and cessation of star formation occurs over a Hubble time, without distinct “quenching” events. SFH diversity is inconsistent with models where galaxy mass, at any given epoch, grows simply along relations between SFR and stellar mass, but is consistent with a two-parameter lognormal form, lending credence to this model from a new and independent perspective.

This paper includes data gathered with the 6.5 m Magellan Telescopes located at Las Campanas Observatory, Chile.

Volume
833
Issue
2
Start page
251
Uri
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12386/24395
Url
https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.3847/1538-4357/833/2/251
Issn Identifier
0004-637X
Ads BibCode
2016ApJ...833..251D
Rights
open.access
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Dressler_2016_ApJ_833_251.pdf

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