Can galaxy outflows and re-accretion produce the downsizing in specific star formation rate of late-type galaxies?
C. Firmani (1,2), V. Avila-Reese (2), A. Rodriguez-Puebla (2), ((1), Inaf-Oab, (2) U.N.A.M)

TL;DR
This paper investigates whether galaxy outflows and re-accretion can explain the observed 'downsizing' in specific star formation rates of late-type galaxies, finding that current models struggle to reproduce the strong SSFR-DS trend.
Contribution
The study introduces self-consistent disc galaxy evolution models incorporating outflows and re-accretion, highlighting their limitations in explaining SSFR downsizing within LCDM frameworks.
Findings
Models with outflows alone predict SSFR increasing with redshift as (1+z)^2.2.
Re-accretion does not significantly alter the SSFR evolution trend.
Observed SSFR downsizing challenges LCDM-based galaxy evolution models.
Abstract
The observations show that less massive the galaxies are, the higher on average is their specific star formation rate (SSFR = SFR/Ms, Ms is the stellar mass). Such a trend, called the 'SSFR downsizing' (SSFR-DS) phenomenon, is seen for local and high-z (back to z~1-2) galaxy samples. We use observational data related only to disc galaxies and explore the average SSFR change with z for different masses. For Ms in the range ~10^9.5-10^10.5 Msun, the SSFR increases with (1+z) to a power that barely depends on Ms, and at all z's smaller galaxies have ever higher SSFRs. The latter strongly disagree with the LCDM hierarchical mass accretion rates. By means of self-consistent models of disc galaxy evolution inside growing LCDM halos, the effects that disc feedback-driven outflows and gas re-accretion have on the galaxy SSFR histories are explored. The parameters of the outflow and re-accretion…
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