X-ray stacking of Lyman break galaxies in the 4\,Ms CDF-S - X-ray luminosities and star formation rates across cosmic time
Peter-Christian Zinn, Stefan Blex, Nicholas Seymour, Dominik J. Bomans

TL;DR
This study uses deep X-ray stacking of Lyman Break Galaxies from the 4 Ms Chandra data to trace their star formation history across cosmic time, revealing a peak at z~3.5 and indicating most early universe star formation occurs in lower luminosity galaxies.
Contribution
It provides the first extensive X-ray stacking analysis of LBGs across a broad redshift range, constraining their star formation rates and cosmic contribution.
Findings
Star formation peaks at z~3.5 in LBGs.
LBGs contribute negligibly to the total cosmic SFRD.
Most early universe star formation occurs in lower luminosity galaxies.
Abstract
Lyman Break Galaxies (LBGs) are widely thought to be prototypical young galaxies in the early universe, particularly representative of those undergoing massive events of star formation. Therefore, LBGs should produce significant amounts of X-ray emission. We aim to trace the X-ray luminosity of Lyman Break Galaxies across cosmic time and from that derive constraints on their star formation history. We utilize the newly released 4 Ms mosaic obtained with the Chandra X-ray Observatory, the deepest X-ray image to date, alongside with the superb spectroscopic data sets available in the CDF-S survey region to construct large but nearly uncontaminated samples of LBGs across a wide range of redshift (0.5 < z < 4.5) which can be used as input samples for stacking experiments. This approach allows us to trace the X-ray emission of Lyman Break Galaxies to even lower, previously unreachable, flux…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena
