MOIRCS Deep Survey IV: Evolution of Galaxy Stellar Mass Function Back to z ~ 3
M. Kajisawa, T. Ichikawa, I. Tanaka, M. Konishi, T. Yamada, M., Akiyama, R. Suzuki, C. Tokoku, Y. K. Uchimoto, T. Yoshikawa, M. Ouchi, I., Iwata, T. Hamana, M. Onodera

TL;DR
This study uses deep near-infrared imaging data from the MOIRCS Deep Survey to analyze the evolution of the galaxy stellar mass function up to redshift 3, revealing significant growth of low-mass galaxies and the importance of hierarchical merging in galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It provides new measurements of the galaxy stellar mass function evolution back to z~3 using deep NIR data, highlighting the steepening of the low-mass slope and the dominance of hierarchical merging.
Findings
Normalization of mass function decreases with redshift.
Low-mass slope becomes steeper with redshift.
Hierarchical merging dominates stellar mass assembly at 1<z<3.
Abstract
We use very deep near-infrared (NIR) imaging data obtained in MOIRCS Deep Survey (MODS) to investigate the evolution of the galaxy stellar mass function back to z~3. The MODS data reach J=24.2, H=23.1, K=23.1 (5sigma, Vega magnitude) over 103 arcmin^2 (wide) and J=25.1, H=23.7, K=24.1 over 28 arcmin^2 (deep) in the GOODS-North region. The wide and very deep NIR data allow us to measure the number density of galaxies down to low stellar mass (10^9-10^10 Msun) even at high redshift with high statistical accuracy. The normalization of the mass function decreases with redshift and the integrated stellar mass density becomes ~ 8-18% of the local value at z~2 and ~ 4-9% at z~3, which are consistent with results of previous studies in general fields. Furthermore, we found that the low-mass slope becomes steeper with redshift from alpha ~- 1.3 at z~1 to alpha ~- 1.6 at z~3, and that the…
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