Bibcode
DOI
Labbé, Ivo; Franx, Marijn; Rudnick, Gregory; Schreiber, Natascha M. Förster; van Dokkum, Pieter G.; Moorwood, Alan; Rix, Hans-Walter; Röttgering, Huub; Trujillo, I.; van der Werf, Paul
Bibliographical reference
The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 665, Issue 2, pp. 944-972.
Advertised on:
8
2007
Journal
Citations
42
Refereed citations
41
Description
Using deep NIR VLT ISAAC and optical HST WFPC2 imaging in the HDF-S and
MS 1054-03, we study the rest-frame UV-to-optical colors and magnitudes
of galaxies to z~3. Unlike the present day, there is no evidence for a
red sequence at z~3, but there does appear to be a well-defined CMR for
blue galaxies at all redshifts, with more luminous galaxies having
redder U-V colors. The slope of the blue CMR is independent of redshift
δ(U-V)/δMV=-0.09+/-0.01 and can be explained by a
correlation of dust reddening with luminosity. The average color at
fixed luminosity reddens strongly Δ(U-V)~0.75 from z~3 to z=0,
much of which can be attributed to aging of stars. The color scatter of
the blue sequence is relatively small σ(U-V)=0.25+/-0.03 and
constant to z~3, but notably asymmetrical, having a sharp blue ridge and
a wing toward redder colors. We explore sets of SFHs to study the
constraints placed by the shape of the scatter at z=2-3. One particular
set of models, episodic star formation, reproduces the detailed
properties very well. For a two-state model with high and low star
formation, the duty cycle is constrained to be >40% and the contrast
in SFR between the states must be a factor >5 [or a scatter in
log(SFR) of >0.35 dex around the mean]. Nevertheless, episodic models
do not explain the observed tail of very red galaxies, primarily DRGs,
which may have ceased star formation altogether or are more heavily
obscured. Finally, the relative number density of red, luminous
MV<-20.5 galaxies increases by a factor of ~6 from z=2.7
to 0.5, as does their contribution to the total rest-frame V-band
luminosity density. We are likely viewing the progressive formation of
red, passively evolving galaxies.
Based on service mode observations collected at the European Southern
Observatory, Paranal, Chile (ESO Program 164.O-0612). Based on
observations with the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope, obtained at the
Space Telescope Science Institute, which is operated by AURA, Inc.,
under NASA contract NAS5-26555.