Evolution of Gas, and Star Formation from z = 0 to 5
ALMA observations of the long wavelength dust continuum are used to estimate the gas masses in a sample of 708 star-forming (SF) galaxies at z = 0.3 to 4.5. We determine the dependence of gas masses and star formation efficiencies (SFE=SFR per unit gass mass). We find that 70 percent of the increase...
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Zusammenfassung: | ALMA observations of the long wavelength dust continuum are used to estimate
the gas masses in a sample of 708 star-forming (SF) galaxies at z = 0.3 to 4.5.
We determine the dependence of gas masses and star formation efficiencies
(SFE=SFR per unit gass mass). We find that 70 percent of the increase in SFRs
of the MS is due to the increased gas masses at earlier epochs while 30 percent
is due to increased efficiency of SF. For galaxies above the MS this is
reversed with 70 percent of the increased SFR relative to the MS being due to
elevated SFEs. Thus, the major evolution of star formation activity at early
epochs is driven by increased gas masses, while the starburst activity taking
galaxies above the MS is due to enhanced triggering of star formation (likely
due to galactic merging). The interstellar gas peaks at z = 2 and dominates the
stellar mass down to z = 1.2. Accretion rates needed to maintain continuity of
the MS evolution exceed 100 Msun per yr at z > 2. The galactic gas contents are
likely the driving determinant for both the rise in SF and AGN activity from z
= 5 to their peak at z = 2 and subsequent fall to lower z. We suggest that for
self-gravitating clouds with supersonic turbulence, cloud collisions and the
filamentary structure of the clouds regulate the star formation activity. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2211.07836 |