A large H{\alpha} survey at z=2.23, 1.47, 0.84 & 0.40: the 11 Gyr evolution of star-forming galaxies from HiZELS
David Sobral, Ian Smail, Philip N. Best, James E. Geach, Yuichi, Matsuda, John P. Stott, Michele Cirasuolo, Jaron Kurk

TL;DR
This study presents a comprehensive, homogeneous H-alpha survey across four redshifts, revealing the evolution of star-forming galaxies over 11 billion years and confirming the strong luminosity increase in star formation activity since z~2.2.
Contribution
First homogeneous survey of H-alpha emitters at z=0.4-2.23, providing detailed evolution of star formation and luminosity functions over 11 Gyr.
Findings
Faint-end slope of luminosity function remains constant at -1.60±0.08.
Characteristic luminosity L* increases significantly with redshift.
Star formation history can be modeled as log(SFRD)=-2.1/(1+z) for z<2.23.
Abstract
This paper presents new deep and wide narrow-band surveys undertaken with UKIRT, Subaru and the VLT; a combined effort to select large, robust samples of H-alpha (Ha) emitters at z=0.40, 0.84, 1.47 and 2.23 (corresponding to look-back times of 4.2, 7.0, 9.2 and 10.6 Gyrs) in a uniform manner over ~2 deg^2 in the COSMOS and UDS fields. The deep Ha surveys reach ~3M_sun/yr out to z=2.2 for the first time, while the wide area and the coverage over two independent fields allow to greatly overcome cosmic variance. A total of 1742, 637, 515 and 807 Ha emitters are homogeneously selected at z=0.40, 0.84, 1.47 and 2.23, respectively, and used to determine the Ha luminosity function and its evolution. The faint-end slope is found to be -1.60+-0.08 over z=0-2.23, showing no evolution. The characteristic luminosity of SF galaxies, L*, evolves significantly as log[L*(z)]=0.45z+log[L*(z=0)]. This is…
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