SIMBAD references

2003ApJ...587...25D - Astrophys. J., 587, 25-40 (2003/April-2)

The evolution of the global stellar mass density at 0<z<3.

DICKINSON M., PAPOVICH C., FERGUSON H.C. and BUDAVARI T.

Abstract (from CDS):

The buildup of stellar mass in galaxies is the consequence of their past star formation and merging histories. Here we report measurements of rest-frame optical light and calculations of stellar mass at high redshift based on an infrared-selected sample of galaxies from the Hubble Deep Field-North. The bright envelope of rest-frame B-band galaxy luminosities is similar in the range 0<z<3, and the comoving luminosity density is constant to within a factor of 3 over that redshift range. However, galaxies at higher redshifts are bluer, and stellar population modeling indicates that they had significantly lower mass-to-light ratios than those of present-day L* galaxies. This leads to a global stellar mass density, Ω*z, that rises with time from z=3 to the present. This measurement essentially traces the integral of the cosmic star formation history that has been the subject of previous investigations. Between 50% and 75% of the present-day stellar mass density had formed by z∼1, but at z~2.7 we find that only 3%-14% of today's stars were present. This increase in Ω*with time is broadly consistent with observations of the evolving global star formation rate, once dust extinction is taken into account, but is steeper at 1<z<3 than predicted by some recent semianalytic models of galaxy formation. The observations appear to be inconsistent with scenarios in which the bulk of stars in present-day galactic spheroids formed at z≫2.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): Cosmology: Early Universe - Galaxies: Evolution - Galaxies: High-Redshift - Galaxies: Stellar Content - Infrared: Galaxies

Simbad objects: 16

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