The LOFAR Two-metre Sky Survey: the radio view of the cosmic star formation history

Prandoni, I.; Hardcastle, M. J.; Röttgering, H. J. A.; Miley, G. K.; Smith, D. J. B.; Gürkan, G.; Best, P. N.; Sabater, J.; Kondapally, R.; Cochrane, R. K.; Duncan, K. J.; Haskell, P.

United States, United Kingdom, Netherlands, Italy, Germany, Australia

Abstract

We present a detailed study of the cosmic star formation history over 90 per cent of cosmic time (0 ≲ z ≲ 4), using deep, radio continuum observations that probe star formation activity independent of dust. The Low Frequency Array Two Metre Sky Survey has imaged three well-studied extragalactic fields, Elais-N1, Boötes, and the Lockman Hole, reaching $\sim 20\, \mu \rm {Jy\,beam^{-1}}$ rms sensitivity at $150\, \rm {MHz}$. The availability of high-quality ancillary data from ultraviolet to far-infrared wavelengths has enabled accurate photometric redshifts and the robust separation of radio-bright AGN from their star-forming counterparts. We capitalize on this unique combination of deep, wide fields and robustly selected star-forming galaxies to construct radio luminosity functions and derive the cosmic star formation rate density. We carefully constrain and correct for scatter in the $L_{150\, \rm {MHz}}-\rm {SFR}$ relation, which we find to be $\sim 0.3\, \rm {dex}$. Our derived star formation rate density lies between previous measurements at all redshifts studied. We derive higher star formation rate densities between z ~ 0 and z ~ 3 than are typically inferred from short wavelength emission; at earlier times, this discrepancy is reduced. Our measurements are generally in good agreement with far-infrared and radio-based studies, with small offsets resulting from differing star formation rate calibrations.

2023 Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Herschel 23