The ALHAMBRA survey: B-band luminosity function of quiescent and star-forming galaxies at 0.2 ≤ z < 1 by PDF analysis

Authors

López-Sanjuan, C.; Tempel, E.; Benítez, N.; Molino, A.; Viironen, K.; Díaz-García, L. A.; Fernández-Soto, A.; Santos, W. A.; Varela, J.; Cenarro, A. J.; Moles, M.; Arnalte-Mur, P.; Ascaso, B.; Montero-Dorta, A. D.; Pović, M.; Martínez, V. J.; Nieves-Seoane, L.; Stefanon, M.; Hurtado-Gil, Ll.; Márquez, I. Perea, J.; Aguerri, J. A. L.; Alfaro, E.; Aparicio-Villegas, T.; Broadhurst, T.; Cabrera-Caño, J.; Castander, F. J.; Cepa, J.; Cerviño, M.; Cristóbal-Hornillos, D.; González Delgado, R. M.; Husillos, C.; Infante, L.; Masegosa, J.; del Olmo, A.; Prada, F.; Quintana, J. M.

Abstract

Aims: Our goal is to study the evolution of the B-band luminosity function (LF) since z 1 using ALHAMBRA data. Methods: We used the photometric redshift and the I-band selection magnitude probability distribution functions (PDFs) of those ALHAMBRA galaxies with I ≤ 24 mag to compute the posterior LF. We statistically studied quiescent and star-forming galaxies using the template information encoded in the PDFs. The LF covariance matrix in redshift - magnitude - galaxy type space was computed, including the cosmic variance. That was estimated from the intrinsic dispersion of the LF measurements in the 48 ALHAMBRA sub-fields. The uncertainty due to the photometric redshift prior is also included in our analysis. Results: We modelled the LF with a redshift-dependent Schechter function affected by the same selection effects than the data. The measured ALHAMBRA LF at 0.2 ≤ z< 1 and the evolving Schechter parameters both for quiescent and star-forming galaxies agree with previous results in the literature. The estimated redshift evolution of MB* ∝ Qz is QSF = -1.03 ± 0.08 and QQ = -0.80 ± 0.08, and of log 10φ∗ ∝ Pz is PSF = -0.01 ± 0.03 and PQ = -0.41 ± 0.05. The measured faint-end slopes are αSF = -1.29 ± 0.02 and αQ = -0.53 ± 0.04. We find a significant population of faint quiescent galaxies with MB ≳ -18, modelled by a second Schechter function with slope β = -1.31 ± 0.11. Conclusions: We present a robust methodology to compute LFs using multi-filter photometric data. The application to ALHAMBRA shows a factor 2.55 ± 0.14 decrease in the luminosity density jB of star-forming galaxies, and a factor 1.25 ± 0.16 increase in the jB of quiescent ones since z = 1, confirming the continuous build-up of the quiescent population with cosmic time. The contribution of the faint quiescent population to jB increases from 3% at z = 1 to 6% at z = 0. The developed methodology will be applied to future multi-filter surveys such as J-PAS.

Publication

Astronomy & Astrophysics, Volume 599, id.A62, 24 pp.

Pubdate

March 2017

DOI

10.1051/0004-6361/201629517

arXiv

arXiv:1611.09231

Bibcode

2017A&A…599A..62L

Keywords

galaxies: luminosity function; mass function; galaxies: statistics; galaxies: evolution; Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies

Figures

../../_images/lopez-sanjuan_et_al_2017_fig_9.svg

López-Sanjuan et al. (2017), Fig. 9

ALHAMBRA luminosity function of star-forming galaxies in four redshift bins (labelled in the panels). The blue squares are the observed luminosity functions and the blue solid lines the median model.

Source: sources/lopez-sanjuan_et_al_2017/fig_9.py

López-Sanjuan et al. (2017), Fig. 9 reproduced using the public ALHAMBRA catalogue. Since the catalogue does not include the star-forming or quiescent classification, a simple random choice based on Fig. 4 of López-Sanjuan et al. (2017) was made. This mostly impacts the distribution in the first panel.

Overlaid in red is the SkyPy simulation using the given model for the Schechter function parameters.