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A&A 421, 41-58 (2004)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20035909
The evolution of the luminosity functions in the FORS Deep Field from low to high redshift
I. The blue bands
A. Gabasch1, 2, R. Bender1, 2, S. Seitz1, U. Hopp1, 2, R. P. Saglia1, 2, G. Feulner1, J. Snigula1, N. Drory3, I. Appenzeller4, J. Heidt4, D. Mehlert4, S. Noll4, A. Böhm5, K. Jäger5, B. Ziegler5 and K. J. Fricke51 Universitäts-Sternwarte München, Scheinerstr. 1, 81679 München, Germany
2 Max-Planck-Institut für Extraterrestrische Physik, Giessenbachstraße, 85748 Garching b. München, Germany
3 McDonald Observatory, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas 78712, USA
4 Landessternwarte Heidelberg, Königstuhl, 69117 Heidelberg, Germany
5 Universitäts-Sternwarte Göttingen, Geismarlandstr. 11, 37083 Göttingen, Germany
(Received 19 December 2003/ Accepted 20 March 2004)
Abstract
We use the very deep and homogeneous
I-band selected
dataset of the FORS Deep Field (FDF) to trace the evolution of the
luminosity function over the redshift range
0.5 < z < 5.0.
We show that the FDF
I-band selection down to
IAB=26.8 misses
of the order of 10% of the galaxies that would be detected in a
K-band selected survey with magnitude limit
KAB=26.3 (like
FIRES). Photometric redshifts for 5558 galaxies are estimated based
on the photometry in 9 filters (
U,
B, Gunn
g,
R,
I, SDSS
z,
J,
K and a special filter centered at 834 nm). A comparison with 362 spectroscopic redshifts shows that the achieved accuracy
of the
photometric redshifts is
with only ~
1% outliers. This allows us to derive luminosity
functions with a reliability similar to spectroscopic surveys. In
addition, the luminosity functions can be traced to objects of lower
luminosity which generally are not accessible to spectroscopy. We
investigate the evolution of the luminosity functions evaluated in
the restframe UV (1500 Å and 2800 Å),
u',
B, and
g' bands.
Comparison with results from the literature shows the reliability of
the derived luminosity functions. Out to redshifts of
the data are consistent with a slope of the luminosity function
approximately constant with redshift, at a value of
in the UV (1500 Å, 2800 Å) as well as
u', and
in the blue (
g',
B). We do not see evidence for a very steep slope
(
) in the UV at
and
favoured by other
authors. There may be a tendency for the faint-end slope to become
shallower with increasing redshift but the effect is marginal. We
find a brightening of
and a decrease of
with
redshift for all analyzed wavelengths. The effect is systematic and
much stronger than what can be expected to be caused by cosmic
variance seen in the FDF. The evolution of
and
from
z=0 to
z=5 is well described by the simple approximations
and
for
and
. The
evolution is very pronounced at shorter wavelengths
(
a=-2.19, and
b=-1.76 for 1500 Å rest wavelength) and
decreases systematically with increasing wavelength, but is also
clearly visible at the longest wavelength investigated here
(
a=-1.08, and
b=-1.29 for
g'). Finally we show a
comparison with semi-analytical galaxy formation models.
Key words: galaxies: luminosity function, mass function -- galaxy: fundamental parameters -- galaxies: high-redshift -- galaxies: distances and redshifts -- galaxies: evolution
Offprint request: A. Gabasch, gabasch@usm.uni-muenchen.de
SIMBAD Objects
Tables at the CDS
© ESO 2004
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