Stacking analysis shows mean SFR in massive galaxies at 2<z<4.5 declines along the Hubble sequence from ~280 M⊙/yr in irregulars to ~80 M⊙/yr in spheroids, with a simple chemical evolution model explaining the rise in dust-to-stellar mass ratio out to z~8.
A Deep Sub-millimeter Survey of Lensing Clusters: A New Window on Galaxy Formation and Evolution
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abstract
We present the first results of a sub-millimeter survey of distant clusters using the new Sub-mm Common-User Bolometer Array (SCUBA) on the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope. We have mapped fields in two massive, concentrated clusters, A370 at z=0.37 and Cl2244-02 at z=0.33, at wavelengths of 450 and 850-um. The resulting continuum maps cover a total area of about 10 sq. arcmin to 1 sigma noise levels less than 14 and 2 mJy per beam at the two wavelengths, 2-3 orders of magnitude deeper than was previously possible. We have concentrated on lensing clusters to exploit the amplification of all background sources by the cluster, improving the sensitivity by a factor of 1.3--2 as compared with a blank-field survey. A cumulative source surface density of (2.4+/-1.0) x 10^3 per sq. degree is found to a 50% completeness limit of ~4 mJy at 850-um. The sub-mm spectral properties of these sources indicate that the majority lie at high redshift, z>1. Without correcting for lens amplification, our observations limit the blank-field counts at this depth. The surface density is 3 orders of magnitude greater than the expectation of a non-evolving ber density of strongly star-forming galaxies in the high-redshift Universe and suggest that optical surveys may have substantial underestimated the star formation density in the distant Universe. Deeper sub-mm surveys with SCUBA should detect large numbers of star-forming galaxies at high redshift, and so provide strong constraints on the formation of normal galaxies.
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COSMOS-Web: Star formation along the early Hubble sequence and the evolution of dust over the redshift range 0<z<12
Stacking analysis shows mean SFR in massive galaxies at 2<z<4.5 declines along the Hubble sequence from ~280 M⊙/yr in irregulars to ~80 M⊙/yr in spheroids, with a simple chemical evolution model explaining the rise in dust-to-stellar mass ratio out to z~8.