The stellar mass assembly of galaxies from z=0 to z=4. Analysis of a sample selected in the rest-frame near-infrared with Spitzer
Pablo G. Perez-Gonzalez (1,2), George H. Rieke (2), Victor Villar (1),, Guillermo Barro (1), Myra Blaylock (2), Eiichi Egami (2), Jesus Gallego (1),, Armando Gil de Paz (1), Sergio Pascual (1), Jaime Zamorano (1), Jennifer L., Donley (2) ((1) Universidad Complutense de Madrid

TL;DR
This study analyzes the evolution of stellar mass in galaxies from redshift 0 to 4 using Spitzer infrared data, confirming the downsizing scenario and detailing how different galaxy masses assembled their stars over cosmic time.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of stellar mass assembly across a wide redshift range using a large infrared-selected galaxy sample, with detailed mass function estimates and insights into galaxy formation processes.
Findings
50% of local stellar mass assembled by z=1
Most massive galaxies formed rapidly beyond z~3
High-redshift stellar mass dominated by faint red galaxies
Abstract
Using a sample of ~28,000 sources selected at 3.6-4.5 microns with Spitzer observations of the HDF-N, the CDF-S, and the Lockman Hole (surveyed area: ~664 arcmin^2), we study the evolution of the stellar mass content of the Universe at 0<z<4. We calculate stellar masses and photometric redshifts, based on ~2,000 templates built with stellar and dust emission models fitting the UV-to-MIR SEDs of galaxies with spectroscopic redshifts. We estimate stellar mass functions for different redshift intervals. We find that 50% of the local stellar mass density was assembled at 0<z<1 (average SFR:0.048 M_sun/yr/Mpc^3), and at least another 40% at 1<z<4 (average SFR: 0.074 M_sun/yr/Mpc^3). Our results confirm and quantify the ``downsizing'' scenario of galaxy formation. The most massive galaxies (M>10^12.0 M_sun) assembled the bulk of their stellar content rapidly (in 1-2 Gyr) beyond z~3 in very…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
