Wednesday, April 25, 2012

1204.5354 (Guanwen Fang et al.)

Passive and star-forming galaxies at $1.4 \leq z \leq2.5$ in the Aegis field    [PDF]

Guanwen Fang, Xu Kong, Yang Chen, Xuanbin Lin
Using a simple two-color selection based on $g$-, $z$-, and $K$-band photometry, we pick out 1609 star-forming galaxies (sgzKs) and 422 passively evolving galaxies (pgzKs) at z\sim2$ from a $K$-band-selected sample ($K_{\rm AB} < 22.0$) in an area of $\sim 0.44$ deg$^{2}$ of the All-wavelength Extended Groth Strip International Survey. The number counts of pgzKs\ in our sample turn over at $K_{\rm AB} \sim 21.0$, and both the number of faint and bright objects (including sgzKs\ and pgzKs) exceed the predictions of a recent semi-analytic model of galaxy formation, a more successful model is need to explain this diversity. We also find that the star formation rate (SFR) and specific SFR (sSFR) of sgzKs\ increases with redshift at all masses, implying that star-forming galaxies were much more active on average in the past. Moreover, the sSFR of massive galaxies is lower at all redshifts, suggesting that star formation contributes more to the mass growth of low-mass galaxies than to high-mass galaxies. From {\it Hubble Space Telescope} Wide Field Camera 3 near-infrared imaging data, we find that morphologies of $z\sim2$ galaxies not only have diffuse structures with lower $G$ and higher $M_{20}$ values, but also have single-object morphologies (higher $G$ and lower $M_{20}$), implying that there are morphological variety and different formation process for these galaxies at $z\sim2$. Finally, we also study the fraction of active galactic nuclei (AGNs) in the gzKs, 82 of 828 gzKs\ with four IRAC bands can be classified as AGNs ($\sim$ 10%). Most of these AGN candidates have $L_{\rm 0.5-10\ keV}>10^{41}\,\rm erg\,s^{-1}$.
View original: http://arxiv.org/abs/1204.5354

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