Cosmic evolution of submillimeter galaxies and their contribution to stellar mass assembly
Micha{\l} J. Micha{\l}owski, Jens Hjorth, Darach Watson

TL;DR
This study presents a comprehensive analysis of submillimeter galaxies (SMGs), revealing their high star formation rates, significant stellar masses, and their substantial contribution to cosmic star formation and stellar mass assembly at redshifts 2-4.
Contribution
First self-consistent UV-to-radio spectral energy distribution fitting of 76 SMGs, providing new insights into their properties and evolution.
Findings
SMGs have median SFR of 713 MSun/yr at z>0.5
SMGs contribute ~20% to cosmic SFR density at z=2-4
Up to 80% of cosmic star formation at z=2-4 occurs in bright SMGs
Abstract
The nature of galaxies selected at submillimeter wavelengths (SMGs, S_850 > 3 mJy), some of the bolometrically most luminous objects at high redshifts, is still elusive. In particular their star formation histories and source of emission are not accurately constrained. In this paper we introduce a new approach to analyse the SMG data. Namely, we present the first self-consistent UV-to-radio spectral energy distribution fits of 76 SMGs with spectroscopic redshifts using all photometric datapoints from ultraviolet to radio simultaneously. We find that they are highly star-forming (median star formation rate 713 MSun yr^-1 for SMGs at z>0.5), moderately dust-obscured (median A_V~2 mag), hosting significant stellar populations (median stellar mass 3.7x10^11 MSun) of which only a minor part has been formed in the ongoing starburst episode. This implies that in the past, SMGs experienced…
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