A census of star formation histories of massive galaxies at 0.6 < z < 1 from spectro-photometric modeling using Bagpipes and Prospector
Yasha Kaushal, Angelos Nersesian, Rachel Bezanson, Arjen van der Wel,, Joel Leja, Adam Carnall, Stefano Zibetti, Gourav Khullar, Marijn Franx, Adam, Muzzin, Anna De Graaff, Camilla Pacifici, Katherine E. Whitaker, Eric F., Bell, Marco Martorano

TL;DR
This study reconstructs star formation histories of approximately 3000 massive galaxies at redshifts 0.6 to 1 using spectro-photometric modeling, revealing that most galaxies contain young stars and exhibit mass-dependent growth patterns.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed star formation histories of a large, mass-complete galaxy sample at this epoch using advanced Bayesian spectral modeling tools.
Findings
Most galaxies contain stars younger than 3 Gyr.
Low-mass galaxies form stars later than high-mass galaxies.
Late-time star formation duration varies independently of stellar mass.
Abstract
We present individual star-formation histories of massive galaxies (log() > 10.5) from the Large Early Galaxy Astrophysics Census (LEGA-C) spectroscopic survey at a lookback time of 7 billion years and quantify the population trends leveraging 20hr-deep integrated spectra of these 1800 star-forming and 1200 quiescent galaxies at 0.6 < < 1.0. Essentially all galaxies at this epoch contain stars of age < 3 Gyr, in contrast with older massive galaxies today, facilitating better recovery of previous generations of star formation at cosmic noon and earlier. We conduct spectro-photometric analysis using parametric and non-parametric Bayesian SPS modeling tools - Bagpipes and Prospector to constrain the median star-formation histories of this mass-complete sample and characterize population trends. A consistent picture arises for the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
