We derive the cosmic star formation history (CSFH) out to z=1.3 using a
sample of ~350 radio-selected star-forming galaxies, a far larger sample than
in previous, similar studies. We attempt to differentiate between radio
emission from AGN and star-forming galaxies, and determine an evolving 1.4 GHz
luminosity function based on these VLA-COSMOS star forming galaxies. We
precisely measure the high-luminosity end of the star forming galaxy luminosity
function (SFR>100 M_Sol/yr; equivalent to ULIRGs) out to z=1.3, finding a
somewhat slower evolution than previously derived from mid-infrared data. We
find that more stars are forming in luminous starbursts at high redshift. We
use extrapolations based on the local radio galaxy luminosity function;
assuming pure luminosity evolution, we derive L∗∝(1+z)2.1±0.2
or L∗∝(1+z)2.5±0.1, depending on the choice of the local
radio galaxy luminosity function. Thus, our radio-derived results independently
confirm the ~1 order of magnitude decline in the CSFH since z~1.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures; submitted to ApJ (revised following the referee
report