The Color Magnitude Distribution of Field Galaxies to z~3: the evolution and modeling of the blue sequence
I. Labbe (1), M. Franx (2), G. Rudnick (3), N. Forster Schreiber (4),, P. van Dokkum (5), A. Moorwood (6), H.-W. Rix (7), H. Rottgering (2), I., Trujillo (7), P. van der Werf (2), ((1) Carnegie Observatories, (2) Leiden, Observatory, (3) NOAO, (4) MPE, (5) Yale, (6) ESO

TL;DR
This study analyzes the evolution of the blue galaxy sequence from z~3 to present, revealing a stable color-magnitude relation, episodic star formation patterns, and the growth of red, passive galaxies over cosmic time.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the color-magnitude relation, star formation histories, and the buildup of red galaxies using deep multi-wavelength imaging data.
Findings
Blue sequence shows a consistent color-magnitude relation across redshifts.
Episodic star formation models fit the blue galaxy properties well.
Red, luminous galaxies increase in number density from z~3 to z~0.5.
Abstract
Using deep NIR VLT/ISAAC and optical HST/WFPC2 imaging in the fields of the HDFS and MS1054-03, we study the rest-frame UV-to-optical colors and magnitudes of galaxies to z~3. While there is no evidence for a red sequence at z~3, there does appear to be a well-defined color-magnitude relation (CMR) for blue galaxies at all redshifts, with more luminous galaxies having redder U-V colors. The slope of the blue CMR is independent of redshift d(U-V)/dMV = -0.09 (0.01) and can be explained by a correlation of dust-reddening with luminosity. The average color at fixed luminosity reddens strongly \Delta(U-V) = 0.75 from z~3 to z=0, much of which can be attributed to aging of the stars. The color scatter of the blue sequence is relatively small sigma(U-V) = 0.25 (0.03) and constant to z~3, but notably asymmetrical with a sharp blue ridge and a wing towards redder colors. We explore sets of star…
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