Modelling the UV spectrum of SDSS-III/BOSS galaxies: hints towards the detection of the UV upturn at high-z
Claire Le Cras, Claudia Maraston, Daniel Thomas (ICG-University of, Portsmouth), Donald G. York (Dept. of Astronomy, Astrophysics, The, Fermi Institute, The University of Chicago)

TL;DR
This study uses ultraviolet stellar population models to investigate the UV upturn phenomenon in massive galaxies at high redshift, finding evidence for old stars contributing to UV emission and suggesting the upturn appears around z~1.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive analysis of UV spectra in high-redshift galaxies, providing new insights into the age and properties of UV-bright stellar populations.
Findings
Old stars contribute to UV emission in massive galaxies.
The UV upturn occurs around redshift 1 and increases at lower redshifts.
Models with low to medium upturn temperatures fit the data well.
Abstract
We exploit stellar population models of absorption line indices in the ultraviolet (from 2000 - 3200 Angstrom) to study the spectra of massive galaxies. Our central aim is to investigate the occurrence at high-redshift of the UV upturn, i.e. the increased UV emission due to old stars observed in massive galaxies and spiral bulges in the local Universe. We use a large (~275,000) sample of z~0.6 massive (log M*/Msun > 11.5) galaxies using both individual spectra and stacks and employ a suite of models including a UV contribution from old populations, spanning various effective temperatures, fuel consumptions and metallicities. We find that a subset of our indices, Mg I, Fe I, and BL3096, are able to differentiate between old and young UV ages. We find evidence for old stars contributing to the UV in massive galaxies, rather than star formation. The data favour models with low/medium…
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