The Stellar Mass Density and Specific Star Formation Rate of the Universe at z~7
Valentino Gonzalez (UCSC), Ivo Labbe (OCIW), Rychard J. Bouwens, (UCSC/Leiden Observatory), Garth Illingworth (UCSC), Marijn Franx (Leiden, Observatory), Mariska Kriek (Princeton University), Gabriel B. Brammer (Yale, University)

TL;DR
This study estimates the stellar mass density and specific star formation rate of the universe at z~7 using deep multi-wavelength observations of 11 galaxies, revealing insights into early galaxy formation and evolution.
Contribution
It provides the first robust measurement of stellar mass density and specific star formation rate at z~7, utilizing deep optical to mid-infrared data and synthetic stellar population models.
Findings
Stellar masses range from 0.1 to 12 billion solar masses.
Average galaxy age is about 300 million years, indicating early star formation.
Star formation rates are between 5 and 20 solar masses per year.
Abstract
We use a robust sample of 11 z~7 galaxies (z-dropouts) to estimate the stellar mass density of the universe when it was only ~750 Myr old. We combine the very deep optical to near-Infrared photometry from the HST ACS and NICMOS cameras with mid-Infrared Spitzer IRAC imaging available through the GOODS program. After carefully removing the flux from contaminating foreground sources we have obtained reliable photometry in the 3.6 and 4.5 micron IRAC channels. The spectral shapes of these sources, including their rest frame optical colors, strongly support their being at z~7 with a mean photometric redshift of <z>=7.2+/-0.5. We use Bruzual & Charlot (2003) synthetic stellar population models to constrain their stellar masses and star formation histories. We find stellar masses that range over 0.1 -12x10^9 M_sol and average ages from 20 Myr to up to 425 Myr with a mean of ~300 Myr,…
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