Abstract
Abstract
We investigate the relationship between environment, morphology, and the star formation rate (SFR)–stellar mass relation derived from a sample of star-forming (SF) galaxies (commonly referred to as the “star formation main sequence”, SFMS) in the COSMOS field from 0 < z < 3.5. We constructed and fit the far-UV–far-IR spectral energy distributions of our stellar-mass-selected sample of 111,537 galaxies with stellar and dust emission models using the public packages MAGPHYS and SED3FIT. From the best-fit parameter estimates, we construct the SFR–stellar mass relation as a function of redshift, local environment, NUVrJ color diagnostics, and morphology. We find that the shape of the main sequence derived from our color–color and specific-star-formation-rate-selected SF galaxy population, including the turnover at high stellar mass, does not exhibit an environmental dependence at any redshift from 0 < z < 3.5. We investigate the role of morphology in the high-mass end of the SFMS to determine whether bulge growth is driving the high-mass turnover. We find that SF galaxies experience this turnover independent of bulge-to-total ratio, strengthening the case that the turnover is due to the disk component’s specific SFR evolving with stellar mass rather than bulge growth.
Funder
National Aeronautics and Space Administration
Publisher
American Astronomical Society
Subject
Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics
Cited by
7 articles.
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