Cosmic evolution of star-forming galaxies to $z \simeq 1.8$ in the faint low-frequency radio source population
E. F. Ocran, A. R. Taylor, M. Vaccari, C.H. Ishwara-Chandra, I., Prandoni, M. Prescott, C. Mancuso

TL;DR
This study investigates the evolution of star-forming galaxies up to redshift 1.8 using faint radio sources, revealing luminosity evolution and a decline in star formation rate density over cosmic time.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the luminosity evolution and star formation history of galaxies up to z~1.8 using deep 610 MHz radio observations and multi-wavelength data.
Findings
Infrared-to-radio luminosity ratio decreases with redshift.
No significant evolution in overall space density of star-forming galaxies.
Strong luminosity evolution of radio luminosity with redshift.
Abstract
We study the properties of star-forming galaxies selected at 610 MHz with the GMRT in a survey covering 1.86 deg down to a noise of 7.1\,Jy / beam. These were identified by combining multiple classification diagnostics: optical, X-ray, infrared and radio data. Of the 1685 SFGs from the GMRT sample, 496 have spectroscopic redshifts whereas 1189 have photometric redshifts. We find that the IRRC of star-forming galaxies, quantified by the infrared-to-1.4 GHz radio luminosity ratio , decreases with increasing redshift: out to . We use the statistic to quantify the evolution of the co-moving space density of the SFG sample. Averaged over luminosity our results indicate to be , which is consistent with no evolution in…
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