4.7 Article

The DEEP Groth Strip Survey.: X.: Number density and luminosity function of field E/S0 galaxies at z < 1

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 571, Issue 1, Pages 136-171

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1086/339854

Keywords

cosmology : observations; galaxies : evolution; galaxies : luminosity function, mass function

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We present the luminosity function and color-redshift relation of a magnitude-limited sample of 145 mostly red field E/S0 galaxies at z less than or similar to 1 from the DEEP Groth Strip Survey (GSS). Using nearby galaxy images as a training set, we develop a quantitative method to classify E/S0 galaxies based on smoothness, symmetry, and bulge-to-total light ratio. Using this method, we identify 145 E/S0's at 16.5 < I < 22 within the GSS, for which 44 spectroscopic redshifts (z(spec)) are available. Most of the galaxies with spectroscopic redshifts (86%) form a red envelope in the redshift-color diagram, consistent with predictions of spectral synthesis models in which the dominant stellar population is formed at redshifts z greater than or similar to 1.5. We use the tight correlation between V-I and z(spec) for this red subset to estimate redshifts of the remaining E/S0's to an accuracy of 10%, with the exception of a small number ( 16%) of blue interlopers at low redshift that are quantitatively classified as E/S0's but are not contained within the red envelope. Constructing a luminosity function of the full sample of 145 E/S0's, we find that there is about 1.1-1.9 mag brightening in rest-frame B-band luminosity back to z similar or equal to 0.8 from z = 0, consistent with other studies. Together with the red colors, this brightening is consistent with models in which the bulk of stars in red field E/S0's formed before z(for) greater than or similar to 1.5 and have been evolving rather quiescently, with few large starbursts since then. Evolution in the number density of field E/ S0 galaxies is more difficult to measure, and uncertainties in the raw counts and their ratio to local samples might amount to as much as a factor of 2. Within that uncertainty, the number density of red E/S0's to z similar or equal to 0.8 seems relatively static, being comparable to or perhaps moderately less than that of local E/S0's, depending on the assumed cosmology. A doubling of E/S0 number density since z = 1 can be ruled out with high confidence (97%) if Omega(m) = 1. Taken together, our results are consistent with the hypothesis that the majority of luminous field E/S0's were already in place by z similar to 1, that the bulk of their stars were already fairly old, and that their number density has not changed by large amounts since then.

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