345 research outputs found

    Faint galaxies, extragalactic background light, and the reionization of the Universe

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    I review recent observational and theoretical progress in our understanding of the cosmic evolution of luminous sources. Largely due to a combination of deep HST imaging, Keck spectroscopy, and COBE far-IR background measurements, new constraints have emerged on the emission history of the galaxy population as a whole. Barring large systematic effects, the global ultraviolet, optical, near- and far-IR photometric properties of galaxies as a function of cosmic time cannot be reproduced by a simple stellar evolution model defined by a constant (comoving) star-formation density and a universal (Salpeter) IMF, and require instead a substantial increase in the stellar birthrate with lookback time. While the bulk of the stars present today appears to have formed relatively recently, the existence of a decline in the star-formation density above z=2 remains uncertain. The history of the transition from the cosmic `dark age' to a ionized universe populated with luminous sources can constrain the star formation activity at high redshifts. If stellar sources are responsible for photoionizing the intergalactic medium at z=5, the rate of star formation at this epoch must be comparable or greater than the one inferred from optical observations of galaxies at z=3. A population of dusty, Type II AGNs at z<2 could make a significant contribution to the FIR background if the accretion efficiency is of order 10%.Comment: LateX, 13 pages, aipproc.sty, 5 figures. To appear in the proceedings of the 9th Annual October Astrophysics Conference in Maryland, ``After the Dark Ages: When Galaxies were Young", edited by S. S. Holt and E. P. Smit

    Cosmic Star Formation History

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    I review some recent progress made in our understanding of galaxy evolution and the cosmic history of star formation. Like bookends, the results obtained from deep ground-based spectroscopy and from the Hubble Deep Field imaging survey put brackets around the intermediate redshift interval, 1<z<21<z<2, where starbirth probably peaked at a rate 10 times higher than today. The steady decline observed since z1z\sim 1 is largely associated with late-type galaxies. At z2.5z\gtrsim 2.5, the Lyman-break selected objects may represent the precursors of present-day spheroids, but appear, on average, quite underluminous relative to the expectations of the standard early-and-rapidly forming picture for spheroidal systems. The observed ultraviolet light density accounts for the bulk of the metals seen today in ``normal'' massive galaxies.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, LaTeX with AIP "aipproc" style file. Review Presented at the 1996 7th Annual October Astrophysics Conference in Maryland, ``Star Formation Near and Far'
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