The bright end of the z ~ 7 UV Luminosity Function from a wide and deep HAWK-I survey
M. Castellano, A. Fontana, D. Paris, A. Grazian, L. Pentericci, K., Boutsia, P. Santini, V. Testa, M. Dickinson, M. Giavalisco, R. Bouwens, J.-G., Cuby, F. Mannucci, B. Cl\'ement, S. Cristiani, F. Fiore, S. Gallozzi, E., Giallongo, R. Maiolino, N. Menci, A. Moorwood, M. Nonino

TL;DR
This study uses deep near-infrared observations from the VLT to identify z~7 galaxies, constraining the UV luminosity function and its evolution, and assessing their role in cosmic reionization.
Contribution
It provides new observational constraints on the z~7 UV luminosity function using a wide and deep survey, and evaluates the implications for galaxy evolution and reionization.
Findings
A sample of 15 z~7 galaxy candidates was identified.
The UV luminosity function shows a significant decline from z=6 to z=7.
UV bright galaxies contribute less than needed for reionization.
Abstract
(Abridged) We present here the second half of an ESO Large Programme, which exploits the unique combination of area and sensitivity provided in the near-IR by the camera Hawk-I at the VLT. We have obtained - 30 observing hours with Hawk-I in the Y-band of two high galactic latitude fields. We combined the Y-band data with deep J and K Hawk-I observations, and with FORS1/FORS2 U, B, V, R, I, and Z observations to select z-drop galaxies having Z - Y > 1, no optical detection and flat Y - J and Y - K colour terms. We detect 8 high-quality candidates in the magnitude range Y = 25.5 - 26.5 that we add to the z-drop candidates selected in two Hawk-I pointings over the GOODS-South field. We use this full sample of 15 objects found in -161 arcmin^2 of our survey to constrain the average physical properties and the evolution of the number density of z ~ 7 LBGs. A stacking analysis yields a…
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