The Prevalence of Bursty Star Formation in Low-Mass Galaxies at z=1-7 from Hα-to-UV Diagnostics
Abstract
We present an analysis of bursty star-formation histories (SFHs) of 346 star-forming galaxies at 1 z<7, selected from JWST/NIRSpec G395M and PRISM spectroscopy provided by the CEERS and RUBIES surveys. We analyze the correlation of star-formation rate vs. stellar mass (the star-forming main sequence, SFMS) for our sample and find no significant difference between the intrinsic scatter in the Hα-based SFMS and the UV-continuum-based SFMS. However, the diagnostic power of the SFMS is limited at high redshift and low stellar mass due to observational biases that exclude faint, quenched galaxies. To more directly probe star-formation variability, we examine the dust-corrected Hα-to-UV ratio, which is assumed to trace deviations a from constant SFH over the past 100 Myr. In our sample, 73+4-4% of galaxies exhibit Hα-to-UV ratios inconsistent with a constant SFH. We do not observe any statistically significant evolution in the Hα-to-UV ratio with redshift. Additionally, lower-mass galaxies (7≤log(M*/M)<8.5) are 30 1% more likely to lie above this equilibrium range -- indicative of a recent ( 100 Myr) burst of star formation -- compared to higher-mass systems (8.5≤log(M*/M)≤10.9). These results suggest that bursty SFHs are more common in low-mass galaxies at z 1-7 and that this remains relatively stable across 0.8-6 Gyr after the Big Bang.
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