Mid-Infrared Galaxy Luminosity Functions from the AGN and Galaxy Evolution Survey
X. Dai (1,8), R. J. Assef (1), C. S. Kochanek (1), M. Brodwin (2), M., J. I. Brown (3), N. Caldwell (4), R. J. Cool (5), A. Dey (2), P. Eisenhardt, (6), D. Eisenstein (5), A. H. Gonzalez (7), B. T. Jannuzi (2), C. Jones (4),, S. S. Murray (4), D. Stern (6) ((1) Ohio State Univ.

TL;DR
This study measures galaxy luminosity functions in the mid-infrared using the AGN and Galaxy Evolution Survey, revealing evolution patterns and comparing observations with galaxy formation models.
Contribution
It provides the first well-defined mid-infrared luminosity functions across multiple bands with spectroscopic redshifts and analyzes their evolution and galaxy type dependence.
Findings
Significant evolution in luminosity functions with redshift, modeled as M* evolution.
Good agreement with models at 3.6 and 4.5 microns, less so at 5.8 and 8.0 microns.
Approximately 53% of early-type galaxy stellar mass assembled by z=0.7.
Abstract
We present galaxy luminosity functions at 3.6, 4.5, 5.8, and 8.0 micron measured by combining photometry from the IRAC Shallow Survey with redshifts from the AGN and Galaxy Evolution Survey of the NOAO Deep Wide-Field Survey Bootes field. The well-defined IRAC samples contain 3800-5800 galaxies for the 3.6-8.0 micron bands with spectroscopic redshifts and z < 0.6. We obtained relatively complete luminosity functions in the local redshift bin of z < 0.2 for all four IRAC channels that are well fit by Schechter functions. We found significant evolution in the luminosity functions for all four IRAC channels that can be fit as an evolution in M* with redshift, \Delta M* = Qz. While we measured Q=1.2\pm0.4 and 1.1\pm0.4 in the 3.6 and 4.5 micron bands consistent with the predictions from a passively evolving population, we obtained Q=1.8\pm1.1 in the 8.0 micron band consistent with other…
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