UV Slopes At All Redshifts Are Consistent with H=1 Stochastic Star Formation Histories
Abstract
Multiple investigations support describing galaxy growth as a stochastic process with correlations over a range of timescales governed by a parameter, H, empirically and theoretically constrained to be near unity. Here, we show that the distribution of UV-slopes, β, derived from an ensemble of theoretical H=1 star formation histories (SFHs) is consistent with data at all redshifts z 16. At z=0, the median value βH=1=-2.27 agrees well with the canonical β0=-2.23 for local starbursts meurer1999. At 4 z16, JWST data span the model distribution's 2nd to 98th percentiles. Values of -2.8 β -2.5 should be common in early galaxies without reference to exotic stellar populations -- arising solely from a null hypothesis of H=1 for the underlying diversity of galaxy growth histories. Future data should be interpreted with this fact in mind.
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