UV slope of z3 bright (L>L*) Lyman-break galaxies in the COSMOS field

Abstract

We analyse a unique sample of 517 bright (L>L*) LBGs at redshift z3 in order to characterise the distribution of their UV slopes β and infer their dust extinction under standard assumptions. We exploited multi-band observations over 750 arcmin2 of the COSMOS field that were acquired with three different ground-based facilities: the Large Binocular Camera (LBC) on the Large Binocular Telescope (LBT), the Suprime-Cam on the SUBARU telescope, and the VIRCAM on the VISTA telescope (ULTRAVISTA DR2). Our multi-band photometric catalogue is based on a new method that is designed to maximise the signal-to-noise ratio in the estimate of accurate galaxy colours from images with different point spread functions (PSF). We adopted an improved selection criterion based on deep Y-band data to isolate a sample of galaxies at z 3 to minimise selection biases. We measured the UV slopes (β) of the objects in our sample and then recovered the intrinsic probability density function of β values (PDF(β)), taking into account the effect of observational uncertainties through detailed simulations. The galaxies in our sample are characterised by mildly red UV slopes with <β> -1.70 throughout the enitre luminosity range that is probed by our data (-24 M1600 -21). The resulting dust-corrected star formation rate density (SFRD) is log(SFRD)-1.6 M/yr/Mpc3, corresponding to a contribution of about 25% to the total SFRD at z3 under standard assumptions. Ultra-bright LBGs at z 3 match the known trends, with UV slopes being redder at decreasing redshifts, and brighter galaxies being more highly dust extinct and more frequently star-forming than fainter galaxies. [abridged]

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