4.7 Article

Caltech Faint Galaxy Redshift Survey.: XVI.: The luminosity function for galaxies in the region of the Hubble Deep Field-North to z=1.5

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 567, Issue 2, Pages 672-701

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1086/338226

Keywords

cosmology : observations; galaxies : fundamental parameters; galaxies : luminosity function, mass function; galaxies : stellar content; surveys

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We have carried out a study of the luminosity function (LF) of galaxies in the region of the Hubble Deep Field-North using our very complete redshift catalog. We divide the sample into five redshift bins covering the range 0.01 < z < 1.5 and consider three primary galaxy spectral classes. We solve for the LF at four rest-frame wavelengths from 0.24 to 2.2 mum. We find that the LFs for quiescent galaxies have shallow faint-end slopes while those of galaxies with detectable emission lines have steeper faint-end slopes. Furthermore, these slopes appear to be independent of redshift out to z = 1.05 for each galaxy spectral grouping and agree well with comparable local determinations. We then fix alpha to obtain values of L* for each galaxy spectral grouping as a function of redshift. We find that galaxies with strong absorption lines become brighter with z with Q similar to .6 at all rest-frame bands studied here, where Q = Delta log [L*(z)]/Deltaz, while galaxies with detectable emission lines (i.e., star-forming galaxies) show a smaller change in L* with redshift at all bands, Q similar to 0.3, with Q becoming significantly larger at rest-frame 2400 Angstrom. Passive evolution models of galaxies are in reasonable agreement with these results for absorption-line-dominated galaxies, while plausible star formation histories can reproduce the behavior of the emission-line galaxies. We find a constant comoving number density and stellar mass in galaxies out to z similar to 1.05. By stretching all the correction factors applied to the galaxy counts in the highest redshift bin to their maximum possible values, we can just barely achieve this between z = 1.05 and 1.3. The major epoch(s) of star formation and of galaxy formation must have occurred even earlier. The UV luminosity density, an indicator of the star formation rate, has increased by a factor of similar to4 over the period z = 0-1.

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