# The FMOS-COSMOS survey of star-forming galaxies at $z\sim1.6$ VI:   Redshift and emission-line catalog and basic properties of star-forming   galaxies

**Authors:** Daichi Kashino, John D. Silverman, David Sanders, Jeyhan Kartaltepe,, Emanuele Daddi, Alvio Renzini, Giulia Rodighiero, Annagrazia Puglisi,, Francesco Valentino, St\'ephanie Juneau, Nobuo Arimoto, Tohru Nagao, Olivier, Ilbert, Olivier Le F\`evre, Anton. M. Koekemoer

arXiv: 1812.01529 · 2019-03-20

## TL;DR

This paper presents a new data release from the FMOS-COSMOS survey, providing spectroscopic redshifts and emission-line fluxes for 1931 star-forming galaxies at z~1.6, enabling improved understanding of galaxy properties and evolution.

## Contribution

It offers a comprehensive spectroscopic catalog and analysis of star-forming galaxies at z~1.6, including a refined stellar mass–star formation rate relation and insights into galaxy chemical maturity and ionization.

## Key findings

- Redshift and emission-line flux measurements for 1931 galaxies.
- Revised stellar mass–star formation rate relation with a bending feature.
- Confirmation that massive galaxies at z~1.6 are chemically mature and show ionization differences.

## Abstract

We present a new data release from the Fiber Multi-Object Spectrograph (FMOS)-COSMOS survey, which contains the measurements of spectroscopic redshift and flux of rest-frame optical emission lines (H$\alpha$, [NII], [SII], H$\beta$, [OIII]) for 1931 galaxies out of a total of 5484 objects observed over the 1.7 deg$^2$ COSMOS field. We obtained $H$-band and $J$-band medium-resolution ($R\sim3000$) spectra with FMOS mounted on the Subaru telescope, which offers an in-fiber line flux sensitivity limit of $\sim 1 \times 10^{-17}~\mathrm{erg~s^{-1}~cm^{-2}}$ for an on-source exposure time of five hours. The full sample contains the main population of star-forming galaxies at $z\sim1.6$ over the stellar mass range $10^{9.5}\lesssim M_\ast/M_\odot \lesssim 10^{11.5}$, as well as other subsamples of infrared-luminous galaxies detected by Spitzer and Herschel at the same and lower ($z\sim0.9$) redshifts and X-ray emitting galaxies detected by Chandra. This paper presents an overview of our spectral analyses, a description of the sample characteristics, and a summary of the basic properties of emission-line galaxies. We use the larger sample to re-define the stellar mass--star formation rate relation based on the dust-corrected H$\alpha$ luminosity, and find that the individual galaxies are better fit with a parametrization including a bending feature at $M_\ast\approx10^{10.2}~M_\odot$, and that the intrinsic scatter increases with $M_\ast$ from 0.19 to $0.37$ dex. We also confirm with higher confidence that the massive ($M_\ast\gtrsim10^{10.5}~M_\odot$) galaxies are chemically mature as much as local galaxies with the same stellar masses, and that the massive galaxies have lower [SII]/H$\alpha$ ratios for their [OIII]/H$\beta$, as compared to local galaxies, which is indicative of enhancement in ionization parameter.

## Full text

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## Figures

67 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1812.01529/full.md

## References

88 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1812.01529/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1812.01529