Resolving cosmic star formation histories of present-day bulges, disks, and spheroids with ProFuse
Sabine Bellstedt, Aaron S. G. Robotham, Simon P. Driver, Claudia del, P. Lagos, Luke J. M. Davies, and Robin H. W. Cook

TL;DR
This paper introduces ProFuse, a new imaging technique to analyze galaxy components and their star formation histories, revealing detailed insights into galaxy evolution and the distribution of star formation across different structures.
Contribution
ProFuse provides a novel method for modeling galaxy light distributions and star formation histories directly from imaging data, enabling detailed component-wise analysis.
Findings
ProFuse's results are consistent with traditional SED fitting methods.
Most current star formation occurs in galaxy disks.
A significant portion of stars formed during cosmic noon now reside in spheroids.
Abstract
We present the first look at star formation histories of galaxy components using ProFuse, a new technique to model the 2D distribution of light across multiple wavelengths using simultaneous spectral and spatial fitting of purely imaging data. We present a number of methods to classify galaxies structurally/morphologically, showing the similarities and discrepancies between these schemes. We show the variation in component-wise mass functions that can occur simply due to the use of a different classification method, which is most dramatic in separating bulges and spheroids. Rather than identifying the best-performing scheme, we use the spread of classifications to quantify uncertainty in our results. We study the cosmic star formation history (CSFH), forensically derived using ProFuse with a sample of ~7,000 galaxies from the Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA) survey. Remarkably, the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research
