Hubble Space Telescope Grism Spectroscopy of Extreme Starbursts Across Cosmic Time: The Role of Dwarf Galaxies in the Star Formation History of the Universe

Abstract

Near infrared slitless spectroscopy with the Wide Field Camera 3, onboard the Hubble Space Telescope, offers a unique opportunity to study low-mass galaxy populations at high-redshift (z1-2). While most high-z surveys are biased towards massive galaxies, we are able to select sources via their emission lines that have very-faint continua. We investigate the star formation rate (SFR)-stellar mass (M) relation for about 1000 emission-line galaxies identified over a wide redshift range of 0.3 z 2.3. We use the Hα emission as an accurate SFR indicator and correct the broadband photometry for the strong nebular contribution to derive accurate stellar masses down to M 107 M. We focus here on a subsample of galaxies that show extremely strong emission lines (EELGs) with rest-frame equivalent widths ranging from 200 to 1500 . This population consists of outliers to the normal SFR-M sequence with much higher specific SFRs (> 10 Gyr-1). While on-sequence galaxies follow a continuous star formation process, EELGs are thought to be caught during an extreme burst of star formation that can double their stellar mass in less than 100 Myr. The contribution of starbursts to the total star formation density appears to be larger than what has been reported for more massive galaxies in previous studies. In the complete mass range 8.2 < log(M/M) < 10 and a SFR lower completeness limit of about 2 M yr-1 (10 M yr-1) at z1 (z 2), we find that starbursts having EWrest(Hα)> 300, 200, and 100 A contribute up to 13, 18, and 34 %, respectively, to the total SFR of emission-line selected sample at z1-2. The comparison with samples of massive galaxies shows an increase in the contribution of starbursts towards lower masses.

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