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The UV luminosity function at 0.6 < z < 1 from UVCANDELS

Authors :
Sun, Lei
Wang, Xin
Teplitz, Harry I.
Mehta, Vihang
Alavi, Anahita
Rafelski, Marc
Windhorst, Rogier A.
Scarlata, Claudia
Gardner, Jonathan P.
Smith, Brent M.
Sunnquist, Ben
Prichard, Laura
Cheng, Yingjie
Grogin, Norman
Hathi, Nimish P.
Hayes, Matthew
Koekemoer, Anton M.
Mobasher, Bahram
Nedkova, Kalina V.
O'Connell, Robert
Robertson, Brant
Taamoli, Sina
Yung, L. Y. Aaron
Brammer, Gabriel
Colbert, James
Conselice, Christopher
Gawiser, Eric
Guo, Yicheng
Jansen, Rolf A.
Ji, Zhiyuan
Lucas, Ray A.
Rutkowski, Michael
Siana, Brian
Vanzella, Eros
Ashcraft, Teresa
Bagley, Micaela
Baronchelli, Ivano
Barro, Guillermo
Blanche, Alex
Broussard, Adam
Carleton, Timothy
Chartab, Nima
Codoreanu, Alex
Cohen, Seth
Dai, Y. Sophia
Darvish, Behnam
Davé, Romeel
DeGroot, Laura
De Mello, Duilia
Dickinson, Mark
Emami, Najmeh
Ferguson, Henry
Ferreira, Leonardo
Finkelstein, Keely
Finkelstein, Steven
Gburek, Timothy
Giavalisco, Mauro
Grazian, Andrea
Gronwall, Caryl
Hemmati, Shoubaneh
Howell, Justin
Iyer, Kartheik
Kaviraj, Sugata
Kurczynski, Peter
Lazar, Ilin
MacKenty, John
Mantha, Kameswara Bharadwaj
Martin, Alec
Martin, Garreth
McCabe, Tyler
Olsen, Charlotte
Otteson, Lillian
Ravindranath, Swara
Redshaw, Caleb
Sattari, Zahra
Soto, Emmaris
Zabelle, Bonnabelle
team, the UVCANDELS
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

UVCANDELS is a HST Cycle-26 Treasury Program awarded 164 orbits of primary ultraviolet (UV) F275W imaging and coordinated parallel optical F435W imaging in four CANDELS fields: GOODS-N, GOODS-S, EGS, and COSMOS, covering a total area of $\sim426$ arcmin$^2$. This is $\sim2.7$ times larger than the area covered by previous deep-field space UV data combined, reaching a depth of about 27 and 28 ABmag ($5\sigma$ in $0.2&quot;$ apertures) for F275W and F435W, respectively. Along with the new photometric catalogs, we present an analysis of the rest-frame UV luminosity function (LF), relying on our UV-optimized aperture photometry method yielding a factor of $1.5\times$ increase than the H-isophot aperture photometry in the signal-to-noise ratios of galaxies in our F275W imaging. Using well tested photometric redshift measurements we identify 5810 galaxies at redshifts $0.6&lt;z&lt;1$, down to an absolute magnitude of $M_\text{UV} = -14.2$. In order to minimize the effect of uncertainties in estimating the completeness function, especially at the faint-end, we restrict our analysis to sources above $30\%$ completeness, which provides a final sample of 4726 galaxies at $-21.5&lt;M_\text{UV}&lt;-15.5$. We performed a maximum likelihood estimate to derive the best-fit parameters of the UV LF. We report a best-fit faint-end slope of $\alpha = -1.359^{+0.041}_{-0.041}$ at $z \sim 0.8$. Creating sub-samples at $z\sim0.7$ and $z\sim0.9$, we observe a possible evolution of $\alpha$ with redshift. The unobscured UV luminosity density at $M_\text{UV}&lt;-10$ is derived as $\rho_\text{UV}=1.339^{+0.027}_{-0.030}\ (\times10^{26} \text{ergs/s/Hz/Mpc}^3)$ using our best-fit LF parameters. The new F275W and F435 photometric catalogs from UVCANDELS have been made publicly available on the Barbara A. Mikulski Archive for Space Telescopes (MAST).&lt;br /&gt;Comment: 17 pages, 8 figures, Accepted for publication in ApJ

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2311.15664
Document Type :
Working Paper