1. The evolution of the galaxy UV luminosity function at redshifts z ~ 8-15 from deep JWST and ground-based near-infrared imaging
- Author
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Donnan, C. T., McLeod, D. J., Dunlop, J. S., McLure, R. J., Carnall, A. C., Begley, R., Cullen, F., Hamadouche, M. L., Bowler, R. A. A., Magee, D., McCracken, H. J., Milvang-Jensen, B., Moneti, A., and Targett, T.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We reduce and analyse the available James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) ERO and ERS NIRCam imaging (SMACS0723, GLASS, CEERS) in combination with the latest deep ground-based near-infrared imaging in the COSMOS field (provided by UltraVISTA DR5) to produce a new measurement of the evolving galaxy UV luminosity function (LF) over the redshift range $z = 8 - 15$. This yields a new estimate of the evolution of UV luminosity density ($\rho_{\rm UV}$), and hence cosmic star-formation rate density ($\rho_{\rm SFR}$) out to within $< 300$\, Myr of the Big Bang. Our results confirm that the high-redshift LF is best described by a double power-law (rather than a Schechter) function up to $z\sim10$, and that the LF and the resulting derived $\rho_{\rm UV}$ (and thus $\rho_{\rm SFR}$), continues to decline gradually and steadily up to $z\sim15$ (as anticipated from previous studies which analysed the pre-existing data in a consistent manner to this study). We provide details of the 61 high-redshift galaxy candidates, 47 of which are new, that have enabled this new analysis. Our sample contains 6 galaxies at $z \ge 12$, one of which appears to set a new redshift record as an apparently robust galaxy candidate at $z \simeq 16.4$, the properties of which we therefore consider in detail. The advances presented here emphasize the importance of achieving high dynamic range in studies of early galaxy evolution, and re-affirm the enormous potential of forthcoming larger JWST programmes to transform our understanding of the young Universe., Comment: 28 pages, 4 figures in main manuscript, accepted for publication in MNRAS. Updated zero-point corrections noted in Appendix C
- Published
- 2022
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