The zCOSMOS survey: the role of the environment in the evolution of the luminosity function of different galaxy types
E.Zucca, S.Bardelli, M.Bolzonella, G.Zamorani, O.Ilbert, L.Pozzetti,, M.Mignoli, K.Kovac, S.Lilly, L.Tresse, L.Tasca, P.Cassata, C.Halliday,, D.Vergani, K.Caputi, C.M.Carollo, T.Contini, J.P.Kneib, O.LeFevre,, V.Mainieri, A.Renzini, M.Scodeggio, A.Bongiorno, G.Coppa, O.Cucciati,

TL;DR
This study analyzes how galaxy luminosity functions evolve up to redshift 1, highlighting the influence of galaxy type and environment on their brightness and distribution over cosmic time.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the evolution of galaxy luminosity functions by type and environment using the zCOSMOS 10k sample, revealing environmental effects on galaxy evolution.
Findings
Global luminosity function brightens by ~0.7 mag from z~0.2 to z~0.9.
Overdense regions have brighter M* and flatter slopes in the luminosity function.
Blue galaxies dominate faint magnitudes in low-density environments.
Abstract
(Abridged) We studied the evolution in the B band luminosity function to z~1 in the zCOSMOS 10k sample, for which both accurate galaxy classifications and a detailed description of the local density field are available. The global LF exhibits a brightening of ~0.7 mag in M* from z~0.2 to z~0.9. At low z, late types dominate at faint magnitudes, while the bright end is populated mainly by early types. At higher z, late-type galaxies evolve significantly and, at z~1, the contribution from the various types to the bright end of the LF is comparable. The evolution for early types is in both luminosity and normalization. A similar behaviour is exhibited by late types, but with an opposite trend for the normalization. Studying the role of the environment, we find that the global LF of galaxies in overdense regions has always a brighter M* and a flatter slope. In low density environments,…
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