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Dust correction factors over 0<z<30 < z < 3 in massive star-forming galaxies from stacking in \emph{Herschel}

Abstract

In this work we use stacking analysis in \emph{Herschel} PACS to study the accuracy of several dust-correction factors typically employed to estimate total star-formation rate (SFR) of high-redshift star-forming (SF) galaxies. We also analyze what stacking suggests about the relation between SFR and stellar mass and the redshift evolution of the specific SFR (sSFR=SFR/M{\rm sSFR} = {\rm SFR} / {\rm M_*}). We find that the dust properties of massive SF galaxies evolve with redshift, being galaxies at z23z \sim 2-3 more attenuated than at z1z \sim 1 for a given UV continuum slope and stellar mass. As a consequence, a single IRX-β\beta relation can not be used to recover the total SFR of massive SF galaxies at 0z30 \lesssim z \lesssim 3. This might have implications for higher redshift studies, where a single IRX-β\beta relation derived for local starburst is usually assumed to be valid. However, we find that the local relation between dust attenuation and stellar mass is valid at least up to z1z \sim 1, although deviations are found for higher redshift galaxies where only log(M/M)>10.2510.50\log{\left( M_* / M_\odot \right)} > 10.25-10.50 galaxies are detected through stacking. This, therefore, does not rule out the possibility that the local dust-mass relation can be valid for less massive SF galaxies at z23z \sim 2-3. The SED fitting procedure with stellar population templates gives over-estimated values (about 0.3--0.5 dex in logSFR\log{\rm SFR}) of the dust-corrected SFR at all redshifts studied here. We find that the slope of the main-sequence of star formation is less steep than previously found in massive galaxies with log(M/M)10\log{\left( M_* / M_\odot \right)} \geq 10, and the redshift evolution of the sSFR reported in previous works in massive is well recovered.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&

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