CANDELS: The Evolution of Galaxy Rest-Frame Ultraviolet Colors from z = 8 to 4
Steven L. Finkelstein, Casey Papovich, Brett Salmon, Kristian, Finlator, Mark Dickinson, Henry C. Ferguson, Mauro Giavalisco, Anton M., Koekemoer, Naveen A. Reddy, Robert Bassett, Christopher J. Conselice, James, S. Dunlop, S. M. Faber, Norman A. Grogin, Nimish P. Hathi

TL;DR
This study investigates the evolution of galaxy ultraviolet colors from redshift 8 to 4 using new near-infrared data, revealing significant color evolution driven by dust and stellar mass, with implications for galaxy formation models.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive analysis of UV spectral slope evolution from z=8 to 4, highlighting dust buildup and mass-color relations at high redshift.
Findings
Median UV slope becomes bluer from z=4 to 7.
Faint galaxies at z=7 are redder than previously thought.
Strong correlation between stellar mass and UV color.
Abstract
We study the evolution of galaxy rest-frame ultraviolet (UV) colors in the epoch 4 < z < 8. We use new wide-field near-infrared data in GOODS-S from the CANDELS, HUDF09 and ERS programs to select galaxies via photometric redshift measurements. Our sample consists of 2812 candidate galaxies at z > 3.5, including 113 at z = 7 to 8. We fit the observed spectral energy distribution to a suite of synthetic stellar population models, and measure the value of the UV spectral slope (beta) from the best-fit model spectrum. The median value of beta evolves significantly from -1.82 (+0.00,-0.04) at z = 4, to -2.37 (+0.26,-0.06) at z = 7. Additionally, we find that faint galaxies at z = 7 have beta = -2.68 (+0.39,-0.24) (~ -2.4 after correcting for observational bias); this is redder than previous claims in the literature, and does not require "exotic" stellar populations to explain their colors.…
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