Low Star Formation Rates for z=1 Early-Type Galaxies in the Very Deep GOODS-MIPS Imaging: Implications for their Optical/Near-Infrared Spectral Energy Distributions
A. van der Wel, M. Franx, G.D. Illingworth, P.G. van Dokkum

TL;DR
This study finds that z~1 early-type galaxies have very low obscured star formation rates, indicating their optical/near-IR colors are dominated by old stars and challenging existing stellar population models.
Contribution
It provides new constraints on star formation in early-type galaxies at z~1 using deep MIPS imaging, showing minimal ongoing star formation and implications for their spectral energy distributions.
Findings
Mean SFR less than 5.2 Msol/yr
Obscured star formation has negligible effect on optical/IR colors for ~90% of the sample
Stellar masses may be overestimated by up to a factor of 2 using current models
Abstract
We measure the obscured star formation in z~1 early-type galaxies. This constrains the influence of star formation on their optical/near-IR colors, which, we found, are redder than predicted by the model by Bruzual & Charlot (2003). From deep ACS imaging we construct a sample of 95 morphologically selected early-type galaxies in the HDF-N and CDF-S with spectroscopic redshifts in the range 0.85<z<1.15. We measure their 24 micron fluxes from the deep GOODS-MIPS imaging and derive the IR luminosities and star formation rates. The fraction of galaxies with >2 sigma detections (~25 muJy} is 17(-4,+9)%. Of the 15 galaxies with significant detections at least six have an AGN. Stacking the MIPS images of the galaxies without significant detections and adding the detected galaxies without AGN we find an upper limit on the mean star formation rate (SFR) of 5.2+/-3.0 Msol yr^-1, and on the mean…
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