The Star-formation Mass Sequence out to z=2.5
Katherine E. Whitaker, Pieter G. van Dokkum, Gabriel Brammer, Marijn, Franx

TL;DR
This study examines the star formation rate-stellar mass relation up to redshift 2.5, revealing a non-linear slope, the impact of galaxy selection on this relation, and the existence of three distinct galaxy populations based on dust and star formation activity.
Contribution
It provides a self-consistent analysis of the SFR-M* relation across redshifts, highlighting the effects of galaxy selection criteria and identifying three distinct galaxy populations.
Findings
The SFR-M* relation has a slope of 0.6, with a constant scatter of 0.34 dex.
Blue galaxy selection yields a linear SFR-M* relation, similar to local universe results.
Three galaxy populations are identified: normal, red star-forming, and dusty blue star-forming galaxies.
Abstract
We study the star formation rate (SFR) - stellar mass (M*) relation in a self-consistent manner from 0 < z < 2.5 with a sample of galaxies selected from the NEWFIRM Medium-Band Survey. We find a significant non-linear slope of the relation, SFR \propto M*^0.6, and a constant observed scatter of 0.34 dex, independent of redshift and M*. However, if we select only blue galaxies we find a linear relation SFR \propto M*, similar to previous results at z = 0 by Peng et al. (2010). This selection excludes red, dusty, star-forming galaxies with higher masses, which brings down the slope. By selecting on L_IR/L_UV (a proxy for dust obscuration) and the rest-frame U-V colors, we show that star-forming galaxies fall in three distinct regions of the log(SFR)-log(M*) plane: 1) actively star-forming galaxies with "normal" dust obscuration and associated colors (54% for log(M*) > 10 at 1 < z < 1.5),…
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