The Rising Star-Formation Histories of Distant Galaxies and Implications for Gas Accretion with Time
Casey Papovich (1), Steven L. Finkelstein (1), Henry C. Ferguson (2),, Jennifer M. Lotz (3), and Mauro Giavalisco (4) ((1) Texas A&M University, (2), STScI, (3) NOAO, (4) University of Massachusetts, Amherst)

TL;DR
This study reveals that distant galaxies' star-formation histories increase smoothly over time, driven by gas accretion, with implications for galaxy growth and the initial mass function, challenging previous assumptions of constant or declining SFRs.
Contribution
It demonstrates that galaxy star-formation rates increase as a power law over time, driven by gas accretion, and provides new insights into galaxy evolution from z=8 to 3.
Findings
Star-formation histories increase as t^1.7 from z=8 to 3.
Gas fractions decrease with redshift as (1+z)^0.9.
Gas accretion rates at z>4 may exceed SFRs.
Abstract
Distant galaxies show correlations between their current star-formation rates (SFRs) and stellar masses, implying that their star-formation histories (SFHs) are highly similar. Moreover, observations show that the UV luminosities and stellar masses grow from z=8 to 3, implying that the SFRs increase with time. We compare the cosmologically averaged evolution in galaxies at 3 < z < 8 at constant comoving number density, n = 2 x 10^-4 Mpc^-3. This allows us to study the evolution of stellar mass and star formation in the galaxy predecessors and descendants in ways not possible using galaxies selected at constant stellar mass or SFR, quantities that evolve strongly in time. We show that the average SFH of these galaxies increase smoothly from z=8 to 3 as SFR ~ t^alpha with alpha = 1.7 +/- 0.2. This conflicts with assumptions that the SFR is either constant or declines exponentially in…
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