The galaxy stellar mass-star formation rate relation: Evidence for an evolving stellar initial mass function?
Romeel Dav\'e

TL;DR
This paper investigates the evolving relationship between galaxy stellar mass and star formation rate, proposing that a changing stellar initial mass function (IMF) could explain observed discrepancies across cosmic time.
Contribution
It introduces a model where the characteristic mass of the IMF evolves with redshift, aligning observed galaxy properties with theoretical predictions.
Findings
The observed M*-SFR relation evolves differently than models predict.
A redshift-dependent IMF characteristic mass can reconcile observations with simulations.
The proposed IMF evolution matches cosmic stellar mass growth and supports a 'paunchy' IMF scenario.
Abstract
The evolution of the galaxy stellar mass--star formation rate relationship (M*-SFR) provides key constraints on the stellar mass assembly histories of galaxies. For star-forming galaxies, M*-SFR is observed to be fairly tight with a slope close to unity from z~0-2. Simulations of galaxy formation reproduce these trends owing to the generic dominance of smooth and steady cold accretion in these systems. In contrast, the amplitude of the M*-SFR relation evolves markedly differently than in models. Stated in terms of a star formation activity parameter alpha=(M*/SFR)/(t_H-1 Gyr), models predict a constant alpha~1 out to redshifts z=4+, while the observed M*-SFR relation indicates that alpha increases by X3 from z~2 until today. The low alpha at high-z not only conflicts with models, but is also difficult to reconcile with other observations of high-z galaxies. Systematic biases could…
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