On the Origin of the Galaxy Star-Formation-Rate Sequence: Evolution and Scatter
Aaron A. Dutton, Frank C. van den Bosch, Avishai Dekel

TL;DR
This paper uses a semi-analytic model to explain the evolution and tight scatter of the galaxy star-formation-rate sequence, emphasizing the role of gas accretion and density rather than feedback or halo spin.
Contribution
It introduces a model linking SFR evolution to cosmological gas accretion rates and gas density, explaining the small scatter and evolution of the SFR sequence.
Findings
SFR decline from z~2 is driven by cosmological accretion rate evolution.
Gas density, not gas mass, governs star formation rates.
Scatter in the SFR sequence is mainly due to gas accretion history, not feedback or halo spin.
Abstract
We use a semi-analytic model for disk galaxies to explore the origin of the time evolution and small scatter of the galaxy SFR sequence -- the tight correlation between star-formation rate (SFR) and stellar mass (M_star). The steep decline of SFR from z~2 to the present, at fixed M_star, is a consequence of the following: First, disk galaxies are in a steady state with the SFR following the net (i.e., inflow minus outflow) gas accretion rate. The evolution of the SFR sequence is determined by evolution in the cosmological specific accretion rates, \propto (1+z)^{2.25}, but is found to be independent of feedback. Although feedback determines the outflow rates, it shifts galaxies along the SFR sequence, leaving its zero point invariant. Second, the conversion of accretion rate to SFR is materialized through gas density, not gas mass. Although the model SFR is an increasing function of…
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