The Evolution of the Fractions of Quiescent and Star-forming Galaxies as a Function of Stellar Mass Since z=3: Increasing Importance of Massive, Dusty Star-forming Galaxies in the Early Universe
Nicholas S. Martis, Danilo Marchesini, Gabriel B. Brammer, Adam, Muzzin, Ivo Labb\'e, Ivelina G. Momcheva, Rosalind E. Skelton, Mauro, Stefanon, Pieter G. van Dokkum, Katherine E. Whitaker

TL;DR
This study analyzes how the proportions of quiescent, unobscured, and dusty star-forming galaxies evolve with stellar mass and redshift from z=0.2 to 3, highlighting the increasing importance of dusty star-forming galaxies at high masses and early times.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive, mass-complete analysis of galaxy populations over a wide redshift range, emphasizing the evolving role of dusty star-forming galaxies in the early universe.
Findings
Dusty star-forming galaxies dominate high-mass populations at z>2.
The ratio of dusty to unobscured star-forming galaxies remains relatively constant with redshift.
Red galaxies dominate at high stellar masses across all redshifts.
Abstract
Using the UltraVISTA DR1 and 3D-HST catalogs, we construct a stellar-mass-complete sample, unique for its combination of surveyed volume and depth, to study the evolution of the fractions of quiescent galaxies, moderately unobscured star-forming galaxies, and dusty star-forming galaxies as a function of stellar mass over the redshift interval . We show that the role of dusty star-forming galaxies within the overall galaxy population becomes more important with increasing stellar mass, and grows rapidly with increasing redshift. Specifically, dusty star-forming galaxies dominate the galaxy population with at . The ratio of dusty and non-dusty star-forming galaxies as a function of stellar mass changes little with redshift. Dusty star-forming galaxies dominate the star-forming population at $\log{(M_{\rm…
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