1. Galaxy Stellar Mass Functions from z~10 to z~6 using the Deepest Spitzer/IRAC Data: No Significant Evolution in the Stellar-to-Halo Mass Ratio of Galaxies in the First Gyr of Cosmic Time
- Author
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Stefanon, Mauro, Bouwens, Rychard J., Labb��, Ivo, Illingworth, Garth D., Gonzalez, Valentino, and Oesch, Pascal A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics of Galaxies (astro-ph.GA) ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astrophysics::Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics::Galaxy Astrophysics - Abstract
We present new stellar mass functions at $z\sim6$, $z\sim7$, $z\sim8$, $z\sim9$ and, for the first time, $z\sim10$, constructed from $\sim800$ Lyman-Break galaxies previously identified over the XDF/UDF, parallels and the five CANDELS fields. Our study is distinctive due to (1) the much deeper ($\sim200$ hour) wide-area Spitzer/IRAC imaging at $3.6\mu$m and $4.5\mu$m from the GOODS Re-ionization Era wide Area Treasury from Spitzer (GREATS) program and (2) consideration of $z\sim6-10$ sources over a $3\times$ larger area than previous HST+Spitzer studies. The Spitzer/IRAC data enable $\ge2\sigma$ rest-frame optical detections for an unprecedented $50\%$ of galaxies down to a stellar mass limit of $\sim10^{8}\mathcal{M}_\odot$ across all redshifts. Schechter fits to our volume densities suggest a combined evolution in characteristic mass $\mathcal{M}^*$ and normalization factor $\phi^*$ between $z\sim6$ and $z\sim8$. The stellar mass density (SMD) increases by $\sim1000\times$ in the $\sim500$ Myr between $z\sim10$ and $z\sim6$, with indications of a steeper evolution between $z\sim10$ and $z\sim8$, similar to the previously-reported trend of the star-formation rate density. Strikingly, abundance matching to the Bolshoi-Planck simulation indicates halo mass densities evolving at approximately the same rate as the SMD between $z\sim10$ and $z\sim4$. Our results show that the stellar-to-halo mass ratios, a proxy for the star-formation efficiency, do not change significantly over the huge stellar mass build-up occurred from $z\sim10$ to $z\sim6$, indicating that the assembly of stellar mass closely mirrors the build-up in halo mass in the first $\sim1$ Gyr of cosmic history. JWST is poised to extend these results into the "first galaxy" epoch at $z\gtrsim10$., Comment: Submitted to ApJ, comments welcome
- Published
- 2021