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Intense starbursts at z~5: first significant stellar mass assembly in the progenitors of present-day spheroids

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 July 2007

Aprajita Verma
Affiliation:
Oxford Astrophysics, University of Oxford, UK
Matthew Lehnert
Affiliation:
GEPI, Observatoire de Paris, France
Natascha Förster Schreiber
Affiliation:
MPE, Garching, Germany
Malcolm Bremer
Affiliation:
Physics Department, University of Bristol, UK
Laura Douglas
Affiliation:
Physics Department, University of Bristol, UK
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Abstract

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High redshift galaxies play a key role in our developing understanding of galaxy formation and evolution. Since such galaxies are being studied within a Gyr of the big bang, they provide a unique probe of the physics of one of the first generations of large-scale star-formation. We have performed a complete statistical study of the physical properties of a robust sample of z~5 UV luminous galaxies selected using the Lyman-break technique. The characteristic properties of this sample differ from LBGs at z~3 of comparable luminosity in that they are a factor of ten less massive (~few×109 M) and the majority (~70%) are considerably younger (<100Myr). Our results support no more than a modest decline in the global star formation rate density at high redshifts and suggest that ~1% of the stellar mass density of the universe had already assembled at z~5. The constraint derived for the latter is affected by their young ages and short duty cycles which imply existing z~5 LBG samples may be highly incomplete. These intense starbursts have high unobscured star formation rate surface densities (~100s M yr−1 kpc−2), suggesting they drive outflows and winds that enrich the intra- and inter-galactic media with metals. These properties imply that the majority of z~5 LBGs are in formation meaning that most of their star-formation has likely occurred during the last few crossing times. They are experiencing their first (few) generations of large-scale star formation and are accumulating their first significant stellar mass. As such, z~5 LBGs are the likely progenitors of the spheroidal components of present-day massive galaxies (supported by their high stellar mass surface densities and their core phase-space densities).

Type
Contributed Papers
Copyright
Copyright © International Astronomical Union 2008

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