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Star formation histories (SFHs) of early galaxies (6 9, 87% of massive galaxies (log( M * / M ⊙ )≳9) have SFR gradients consistent with a stochastic star formation activity during the last 100 Myr, while this fraction drops to 15% at z < 7. On the other hand, we see an increasing fraction of galaxies with a star formation activity following a common stream on the SFR– M * plane with cosmic time, indicating that a secular mode of star formation is emerging. We place our results in the context of the observed excess of UV emission as probed by the UV luminosity function at z ≳ 10 by estimating σ UV , the dispersion of the UV absolute magnitude distribution, to be of the order of 1.2 mag, and compare it with predictions from the literature. In conclusion, we find a transition of star formation mode happening around z ∼ 9: Galaxies with stochastic SFHs dominate at z ≳ 9, although this level of stochasticity is too low to reach those invoked by recent models to reproduce the observed UV luminosity function.
Ciesla et al. (Wed,) studied this question.