The UV Continuum of z > 1 Star-forming Galaxies in the Hubble Ultraviolet UltraDeep Field
Peter Kurczynski, Eric Gawiser, Marc Rafelski, Harry I. Teplitz,, Viviana Acquaviva, Thomas M. Brown, Dan Coe, Duilia F. de Mello, Steven L., Finkelstein, Norman A. Grogin, Anton M. Koekemoer, Kyoung-soo Lee, Claudia, Scarlata, Brian D. Siana

TL;DR
This study measures the UV continuum slope beta for over 900 high-redshift galaxies in the Hubble UltraDeep Field, revealing trends with redshift and luminosity, and comparing these to local dwarf galaxies to understand galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It provides the first extensive measurement of beta for galaxies at 1 < z < 2, extending the understanding of UV properties across a broad redshift range.
Findings
Galaxies at 1 < z < 2 are bluer than local dwarf galaxies.
Beta shows a modest color-magnitude relation with no evolution in slope.
A trend of increasing dust reddening with redshift and luminosity is observed.
Abstract
We estimate the UV continuum slope, beta, for 923 galaxies in the range 1 < z < 8 in the Hubble Ultradeep Field (HUDF). These data include 460 galaxies at 1 < z < 2 down to an absolute magnitude M_{UV} = -14 (~0.006 L*_{z=1}; 0.02 L*_{z=0}), comparable to dwarf galaxies in the local universe. We combine deep HST/UVIS photometry in F225W, F275W, F336W wavebands (UVUDF) with recent data from HST/WFC3/IR (HUDF12). Galaxies in the range 1 < z < 2 are significantly bluer than local dwarf galaxies. We find their mean (median) values <beta> = -1.382 (-1.830) +/- 0.002 (random) +/- 0.1 (systematic). We find comparable scatter in beta (standard deviation = 0.43) to local dwarf galaxies and 30% larger scatter than z > 2 galaxies. We study the trends of beta with redshift and absolute magnitude for binned sub-samples and find a modest color-magnitude relation, dbeta/dM = -0.11 +/- 0.01 and no…
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