A New Empirical Method to Infer the Starburst History of the Universe from Local Galaxy Properties
Philip F. Hopkins (Berkeley), Lars Hernquist (CfA)

TL;DR
This paper introduces an empirical method to reconstruct the starburst history of the universe from local galaxy properties, revealing how burst characteristics scale with galaxy mass and contribute to cosmic star formation.
Contribution
It presents a novel inversion technique using stellar profiles to derive detailed starburst histories, linking local observations to cosmic star formation and IR luminosity functions.
Findings
Burst masses are about 10% of spheroid mass.
Starburst timescales are approximately 10^8 years, independent of mass.
Burst contributions to SFR density are 5-10% across redshifts.
Abstract
The centers of bulges are formed dissipationally via gas inflows over short timescales: the 'starburst' mode of star formation (SF). Recent work has shown that detailed observations can be used to separate the stellar mass profile of these 'burst relic' components in local systems. Together with the assumption that some Kennicutt-Schmidt law holds, and that the burst was indeed a dissipational gas-rich event, we show that the observed profiles can be inverted to obtain the time and space-dependent SF history of each burst. Performing this with a large sample of well-studied spheroids, we show that the implied bursts scale in magnitude, mass, peak SFR, and spatial extent with galaxy mass in simple manner, and provide fits to these correlations. Burst masses are ~10% the total spheroid mass; timescales a mass-independent ~10^8 yr; peak SFR ~M_burst/t_burst; and they decay in power-law…
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