The Most Massive Galaxies at 3.0<z<4.0 in the NEWFIRM Medium-Band Survey: Properties and Improved Constraints on the Stellar Mass Function
Danilo Marchesini, Katherine E. Whitaker, Gabriel Brammer, Pieter G., van Dokkum, Ivo Labbe, Adam Muzzin, Ryan F. Quadri, Mariska Kriek, Kyoung-Soo, Lee, Gregory Rudnick, Marijn Franx, Garth D. Illingworth, David Wake

TL;DR
This study uses the NMBS to analyze massive galaxies at redshifts 3.0-4.0, providing refined measurements of their properties and the stellar mass function, highlighting significant dust and AGN activity affecting high-mass galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It offers improved constraints on the high-mass end of the stellar mass function at z=3.5, accounting for systematic uncertainties and the role of dust-obscured star formation and AGN activity.
Findings
Massive galaxies at z=3.5 are predominantly red, faint, and dust-obscured.
The contribution of massive galaxies to the stellar mass budget is about 8%.
Observed SMF shows tension with models, but uncertainties are large.
Abstract
[Abridged] We use the NEWFIRM Medium-Band Survey (NMBS) to characterize the properties of a mass-complete sample of 14 galaxies at 3.0<z<4.0 with M_star>2.5x10^11 Msun, and to derive more accurate measurements of the high-mass end of the stellar mass function (SMF) of galaxies at z=3.5, with significantly reduced contributions from photometric redshift errors and cosmic variance to the total error budget of the SMF. The typical very massive galaxy at z=3.5 is red and faint in the observer's optical, with median r=26.1, and rest-frame U-V=1.6. About 60% of the sample have optical colors satisfying either the U- or the B-dropout color criteria, although ~50% of these galaxies have r>25.5. About 30% of the sample has SFRs from SED modeling consistent with zero. However, >80% of the sample is detected at 24 micron, with total infrared luminosities in the range (0.5-4.0)x10^13 Lsun. This…
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