A deep radio view of the evolution of the cosmic star-formation rate density from a stellar-mass selected sample in VLA-COSMOS
Eliab D. Malefahlo, Matt J. Jarvis, Mario G. Santos, Sarah V. White,, Nathan J. Adams, Rebecca A.A. Bowler

TL;DR
This study uses deep radio observations to analyze the evolution of the cosmic star-formation rate density up to high redshifts, highlighting the importance of the infrared-radio correlation in such measurements.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed radio luminosity functions of galaxies in COSMOS across multiple redshifts, incorporating Bayesian modeling and stellar mass selection to refine cosmic SFRD estimates.
Findings
Cosmic SFRD declines beyond z~1 if IRRC evolves, but remains higher with a constant IRRC.
Radio luminosity functions show similar evolution to literature up to z~1.6.
High stellar mass galaxies dominate the SFRD at all redshifts.
Abstract
We present the 1.4GHz radio luminosity functions (RLFs) of galaxies in the COSMOS field, measured above and below the detection threshold, using a Bayesian model-fitting technique. The radio flux-densities from VLA-COSMOS 3-GHz data, are extracted at the position of stellar mass-limited near-infrared (NIR) galaxies. We fit a local RLF model, which is a combination of active galactic nuclei (AGN) and star-forming galaxy (SFG), in 10 redshift bins with a pure luminosity evolution (PLE) model. We show that the evolution strength is similar to literature values up to . Beyond , we find that the SFG RLF exhibits a negative evolution ( moves to lower luminosities) due to the decrease in low stellar-mass sources in our stellar mass-limited sample at high redshifts. From the RLF for SFGs, we determine the evolution in the cosmic star-formation-rate density…
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