The extended epoch of galaxy formation: age dating of ~3600 galaxies with 2<z<6.5 in the VIMOS Ultra-Deep Survey
R. Thomas (1,2), O. Le F\`evre (1), M. Scodeggio (3), P. Cassata (2),, B. Garilli (3), V. Le Brun (1), B.C. Lemaux (1), D. Maccagni (3), J.Pforr, (1), L. A. M. Tasca (1), G. Zamorani (4), S. Bardelli (4), N.P. Hathi (1), L., Tresse (1)

TL;DR
This study measures the ages of nearly 3600 high-redshift galaxies to understand the epoch of galaxy formation, revealing a continuous formation process from z~15 to z~2 and a consistent increase in galaxy formation rate over cosmic time.
Contribution
It introduces a method combining spectroscopy and photometry to accurately derive galaxy ages at high redshift, and constructs the formation redshift function showing a universal, smoothly increasing trend.
Findings
Galaxy ages range from tens of Myr to 2 Gyr.
Galaxy formation extends from z~15 to z~2.
The formation redshift function follows a (1+z)^0.58 trend.
Abstract
We aim at improving constraints on the epoch of galaxy formation by measuring the ages of 3597 galaxies with spectroscopic redshifts 2<z<6.5 in the VIMOS Ultra Deep Survey (VUDS). We derive ages and other physical parameters from the simultaneous fitting with the GOSSIP+ software of observed UV rest-frame spectra and photometric data from the u-band up to 4.5 microns using composite stellar population models. We conclude from extensive simulations that at z>2 the joint analysis of spectroscopy and photometry combined with restricted age possibilities when taking into account the age of the Universe substantially reduces systematic uncertainties and degeneracies in the age derivation. We find galaxy ages ranging from very young with a few tens of million years to substantially evolved with ages up to ~1.5-2 Gyr. The formation redshifts z_f derived from the measured ages indicate that…
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