4.7 Article

Effects of self-consistent rest-ultraviolet colours in semi-empirical galaxy formation models

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 498, Issue 2, Pages 2645-2661

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/staa2586

Keywords

dust, extinction; galaxies: evolution; galaxies: high-redshift; galaxies: ISM

Funding

  1. CITA National Fellowship
  2. NASA Hubble Fellowship - Space Telescope Science Institute [HST-HF2-51413.001-A]
  3. NASA [NAS5-26555]
  4. Canada Foundation for Innovation (CFI)
  5. ministere de l' Economie, de la science et de l'innovation du Quebec (MESI)
  6. Fonds de recherche du Quebec-Nature et technologies (FRQ-NT)

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Connecting the observed rest-ultraviolet (UV) luminosities of high-z galaxies to their intrinsic luminosities (and thus star formation rates, SFRs) requires correcting for the presence of dust. We bypass a common dust-correction approach that uses empirical relationships between infrared (IR) emission and UV colours, and instead augment a semi-empirical model for galaxy formation with a simple - but self-consistent - dust model and use it to jointly fit high-z rest-UV luminosity functions (LFs) and colour-magnitude relations (M-UV-beta). In doing so, we find that UV colours evolve with redshift (at fixed UV magnitude), as suggested by observations, even in cases without underlying evolution in dust production, destruction, absorption, or geometry. The observed evolution in our model arises due to the reduction in the mean stellar age and rise in specific SFRs with increasing z. The UV extinction, A(UV), evolves similarly with redshift, though we find a systematically shallower relation between A(UV) and M-UV than that predicted by IRX-beta relationships derived from z similar to 3 galaxy samples. Finally, assuming that high 1600-angstrom transmission (greater than or similar to 0.6) is a reliable Ly alpha emitter (LAE) indicator, modest scatter in the effective dust surface density of galaxies can explain the evolution both in M-UV-beta and LAE fractions. These predictions are readily testable by deep surveys with the James Webb Space Telescope.

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