Star formation and mass assembly in high redshift galaxies
P. Santini (1,2), A. Fontana (1), A. Grazian (1), S. Salimbeni (1,3),, F. Fiore (1), F. Fontanot (4), K. Boutsia (1), M. Castellano (1,2), S., Cristiani (5), C. De Santis (6,7), S. Gallozzi (1), E. Giallongo (1), N., Menci (1), M. Nonino (5), D. Paris (1), L. Pentericci (1)

TL;DR
This study investigates star formation and mass assembly in high-redshift galaxies using IR emission, revealing that massive galaxies dominate star formation at z~2 and support the downsizing scenario, with some discrepancies from theoretical models.
Contribution
It provides a comparative analysis of IR-based and SED fit-based SFR estimates, and highlights the evolution of star formation in massive galaxies up to z~2.5.
Findings
SFR correlates with stellar mass, steepening with redshift.
Massive galaxies contribute increasingly to SFRD up to z~2.5.
SSFR distribution shows bimodality, supporting downsizing.
Abstract
We study the star formation and the mass assembly process of 0.3<=z<2.5 galaxies using their IR emission from MIPS 24um band. We used an updated version of the GOODS-MUSIC catalog, extended by the addition of mid-IR fluxes. We compared two different estimators of the Star Formation Rate: the total infrared emission derived from 24um, estimated using both synthetic and empirical IR templates, and the multiwavelength fit to the full galaxy SED. For both estimates, we computed the SFR Density and the Specific SFR. The two SFR tracers are roughly consistent, given the uncertainties involved. However, they show a systematic trend, IR-based estimates exceeding the fit-based ones as the SFR increases. We show that: a) at z>0.3, the SFR is well correlated with stellar mass, and this relationship seems to steepen with redshift (using IR-based SFRs); b) the contribution to the global SFRD by…
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