The Red-Sequence Luminosity Function in Galaxy Clusters since z~1
David G. Gilbank (1), H. K. C. Yee (1), E. Ellingson (2), M. D., Gladders (3), Y.-S. Loh (4), L. F. Barrientos (5), W. A. Barkhouse (6), ((1) University of Toronto, (2) University of Colorado at Boulder, (3), University of Chicago, (4) UCLA, (5) Universidad Catolica de Chile

TL;DR
This study analyzes the evolution of red-sequence galaxies in galaxy clusters from redshift 0.35 to 0.95, revealing a decrease in faint red galaxies over time and supporting the down-sizing galaxy formation model.
Contribution
It provides the first homogeneous analysis of red-sequence luminosity functions across this redshift range, highlighting the evolution and richness dependence of galaxy star-formation cessation.
Findings
Faint red galaxies decrease with decreasing redshift.
Richness influences the timing of star-formation termination.
Increase in faint blue galaxies over time.
Abstract
We use a statistical sample of ~500 rich clusters taken from 72 square degrees of the Red-Sequence Cluster Survey (RCS-1) to study the evolution of ~30,000 red-sequence galaxies in clusters over the redshift range 0.35<z<0.95. We construct red-sequence luminosity functions (RSLFs) for a well-defined, homogeneously selected, richness limited sample. The RSLF at higher redshifts shows a deficit of faint red galaxies (to M_V=> -19.7) with their numbers increasing towards the present epoch. This is consistent with the `down-sizing` picture in which star-formation ended at earlier times for the most massive (luminous) galaxies and more recently for less massive (fainter) galaxies. We observe a richness dependence to the down-sizing effect in the sense that, at a given redshift, the drop-off of faint red galaxies is greater for poorer (less massive) clusters, suggesting that star-formation…
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