Insufficient Gas Accretion Caused the Decline in Cosmic Star-Formation Activity 8 Billion Years Ago

Abstract

Measurements of the atomic hydrogen (HI) properties of high-redshift galaxies are critical to understanding the decline in the star-formation rate (SFR) density of the Universe after its peak ≈8-11 Gyr ago. Here, we use ≈510 hours of observations with the upgraded Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope to measure the dependence of the average HI mass of star-forming galaxies at z=0.74-1.45 on their average stellar mass and redshift, by stacking their HI 21 cm emission signals. We divide our sample of 11,419 main-sequence galaxies at z=0.74-1.45 into two stellar-mass (M*) subsamples, with M*>1010 M and M*<1010 M, and obtain clear detections, at >4.6σ significance, of the stacked HI 21 cm emission in both subsamples. We find that galaxies with M*>1010 M, which dominate the decline in the cosmic SFR density at z1, have HI reservoirs that can sustain their SFRs for only a short period, 0.860.20 Gyr, unless their HI is replenished via accretion. We also stack the HI 21 cm emission from galaxies in two redshift subsamples, at z=0.74-1.25 and z=1.25-1.45, again obtaining clear detections of the stacked HI 21 cm emission signals, at >5.2σ significance in both subsamples. We find that the average HI mass of galaxies with M* ≈1010 M declines steeply over a period of ≈1 billion years, from (33.66.4) × 109 M at z≈1.3 to (10.61.9)×109 M at z≈1.0, i.e. by a factor 3. We thus find direct evidence that accretion of HI onto star-forming galaxies at z≈1 is insufficient to replenish their HI reservoirs and sustain their SFRs, thus resulting in the decline in the cosmic SFR density 8 billion years ago.

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