- The paper quantifies mass-dependent evolution, showing low-mass galaxies evolve rapidly while massive ones experience quenching near 10^(10.7-10.9) M☉.
- It finds a dramatic 1.6 dex increase in the density of quiescent galaxies from z≈3 to z≈1, with minimal change at lower redshifts.
- The paper introduces an innovative method to infer star formation rates from mass functions, aligning with direct measurements up to z<1.5 and challenging existing models.
This paper presents a detailed analysis of the mass assembly process in quiescent and star-forming galaxies from redshifts z≈4 to z=0.2, leveraging data from the UltraVISTA survey. The research endeavors to understand the stellar mass function (MF) and the stellar mass density of these galaxies, offering insights into the cosmic processes affecting galaxy formation and evolution.
The dataset comprises 220,000 galaxies within COSMOS fields, Ks<24, harnessing the depth and breadth of 30-band photometric redshifts. The precision of these redshift estimates derives from a comparison with approximately 10,800 spectroscopic redshifts, revealing accuracy metrics of σΔz/(1+z)=0.008 at i+<22.5 and σΔz/(1+z)=0.03 for $1.5
Key Findings
- Mass-Dependent Evolution: The paper finds significant variations in the evolution of galaxy mass functions based on mass. Low-mass galaxies evolve more dynamically across the observed redshift range than their more massive counterparts. Specifically, the MF evolution was shown to be mass-dependent, particularly due to the quenching of star formation in galaxies with masses greater than approximately $10^{10.7-10.9} M_{\sun}$.
- Quiescent Galaxy Mass Function: For quiescent galaxies, the high-mass end of the mass function at z<1 shows little evolution, while the faint-end slope noticeably flattens. From z∼3 to z∼1, the density of quiescent galaxies increased significantly by 1.6 dex, but this slowed to less than 0.2 dex at lower redshifts. This underlines a transition period around z∼1 for massive quiescent galaxies.
- Inferred Star Formation Rates: An innovative method for inferring the star formation rate from MFs shows consistency with direct measurements up to z<1.5, although there are discrepancies of 0.2 dex at higher redshifts. This method uncovers a continuous increase in specific star formation rates (sSFR) for galaxies between $10^{10-10.5} M_{\sun}$ in the redshift range $1
- Model Comparisons: The paper's MF results challenge existing semi-analytical models, which tend to overestimate the density of low-mass quiescent galaxies by an order of magnitude, despite accurately capturing the population of low-mass star-forming galaxies.
Implications and Future Directions
The findings support the notion of mass-dependent evolution driven by efficient mass quenching. This particularly affects massive galaxies and may be driven by either AGN activity, major mergers, or dynamical processes in dark matter haloes. The lesser evolution observed in the less massive galaxies suggests environmental quenching mechanisms linked to local environmental densities and dynamical processes. Conversely, these results underline the nuanced interplay between cosmic star formation history and galaxy evolution.
This paper highlights the importance of increasingly accurate MF estimates to refine theoretical models related to galaxy evolution. As observational techniques advance and larger datasets become available, further research may explore more fine-grained stratifications in galaxy populations and their respective evolutionary paths.
As a next step, further application of this method in conjunction with increasingly accurate and expansive datasets could help resolve discrepancies between empirical observations and theoretical models, particularly in reconciling the predicted and observed population of low and high-mass galaxies at various redshifts.