Exploring the z=3-4 massive galaxy population with ZFOURGE: the prevalence of dusty and quiescent galaxies
Lee R. Spitler, Caroline M. S. Straatman, Ivo Labbe, Karl Glazebrook,, Kim-Vy H. Tran, Glenn G. Kacprzak, Ryan F. Quadri, Casey Papovich, S. Eric, Persson, Pieter van Dokkum, Rebecca Allen, Lalitwadee Kawinwanichakij, Daniel, D. Kelson, Patrick J. McCarthy, Nicola Mehrtens

TL;DR
This study uses the ZFOURGE survey to analyze a stellar mass-limited sample of galaxies at redshifts 3-4, revealing a diverse population including dusty, quiescent, and luminous star-forming galaxies, challenging previous UV-based selections.
Contribution
It provides the first mass-complete, near-infrared-based characterization of massive galaxies at z=3-4, highlighting their diversity and the prevalence of dusty and quiescent types.
Findings
46% of massive galaxies are quiescent
54% are dusty star-forming galaxies
Dusty galaxies have lower specific star-formation rates
Abstract
Our understanding of the redshift galaxy population relies largely on samples selected using the popular "dropout" technique, typically consisting of UV-bright galaxies with blue colors and prominent Lyman breaks. As it is currently unknown if these galaxies are representative of the massive galaxy population, we here use the FourStar Galaxy Evolution (ZFOURGE) Survey to create a stellar mass-limited sample at . Uniquely, ZFOURGE uses deep near-infrared medium-bandwidth filters to derive accurate photometric redshifts and stellar population properties. The mass-complete sample consists of 57 galaxies with log M , reaching below at . On average, the massive galaxies are extremely faint in the observed optical with median (restframe ). They lie far below the UV luminosity-stellar mass…
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