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CEERS: Increasing Scatter along the Star-Forming Main Sequence Indicates Early Galaxies Form in Bursts

Authors :
Cole, Justin W.
Papovich, Casey
Finkelstein, Steven L.
Bagley, Micaela B.
Dickinson, Mark
Iyer, Kartheik G.
Yung, L. Y. Aaron
Ciesla, Laure
Amorin, Ricardo O.
Haro, Pablo Arrabal
Bhatawdekar, Rachana
Calabro, Antonello
Cleri, Nikko J.
de la Vega, Alexander
Dekel, Avishai
Endsley, Ryan
Gawiser, Eric
Giavalisco, Mauro
Hathi, Nimish P.
Hirschmann, Michaela
Holwerda, Benne W.
Kartaltepe, Jeyhan S.
Koekemoer, Anton M.
Lucas, Ray A.
Mascia, Sara
Mobasher, Bahram
Perez-Gonzalez, Pablo G.
Rodighiero, Giulia
Ronayne, Kaila
Tachhella, Sandro
Weiner, Benjamin J.
Wilkins, Stephen M.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

We present the star-formation-rate -- stellar-mass (SFR-M$_\ast$) relation for galaxies in the CEERS survey at $4.5\leq z\leq 12$. We model the \jwst\ and \hst\ rest-UV and rest-optical photometry of galaxies with flexible star-formation histories (SFHs) using \bagpipes. We consider SFRs averaged from the SFHs over 10~Myr (\sfrten) and 100~Myr (\sfrcen), where the photometry probes SFRs on these timescales, effectively tracing nebular emission lines in the rest-optical (on $\sim10$~Myr timescales) and the UV/optical continuum (on $\sim100$ Myr timescales). We measure the slope, normalization and intrinsic scatter of the SFR-M$_\ast$ relation, taking into account the uncertainty and the covariance of galaxy SFRs and $M_\ast$. From $z\sim 5-9$ there is larger scatter in the $\sfrten-M_\ast$ relation, with $\sigma(\log \sfrcen)=0.4$~dex, compared to the $\sfrcen-M_\ast$ relation, with $\sigma(\log \sfrten)=0.1$~dex. This scatter increases with redshift and increasing stellar mass, at least out to $z\sim 7$. These results can be explained if galaxies at higher redshift experience an increase in star-formation variability and form primarily in short, active periods, followed by a lull in star formation (i.e. ``napping'' phases). We see a significant trend in the ratio $R_\mathrm{SFR}=\log(\sfrten/\sfrcen)$ in which, on average, $R_\mathrm{SFR}$ decreases with increasing stellar mass and increasing redshift. This yields a star-formation ``duty cycle'' of $\sim40\%$ for galaxies with $\log M_\ast/M_\odot\geq 9.3$, at $z\sim5$, declining to $\sim20\%$ at $z\sim9$. Galaxies also experience longer lulls in star formation at higher redshift and at higher stellar mass, such that galaxies transition from periods of higher SFR variability at $z\gtrsim~6$ to smoother SFR evolution at $z\lesssim~4.5$.<br />Comment: 28 pages, 12 figures, 2 Appendix figures

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2312.10152
Document Type :
Working Paper