The Faint End of the Luminosity Function and Low Surface Brightness Galaxies
Margaret J. Geller, Antonaldo Diaferio, Michael J. Kurtz, Ian P., Dell'Antonio, and Daniel G. Fabricant

TL;DR
This study measures the faint end slope of the galaxy luminosity function using the SHELS survey, highlighting the significance of low surface brightness galaxies in understanding galaxy distribution.
Contribution
It provides one of the few direct measurements of the faint end slope dependence on surface brightness using a robust spectroscopic survey.
Findings
Faint end slope alpha = -1.31 +/- 0.04 for the overall sample.
Lower surface brightness galaxies have a steeper faint end slope, alpha_{22.5} = -1.52 +/- 0.16.
Lower surface brightness objects dominate the faint end of the luminosity function.
Abstract
SHELS (Smithsonian Hectospec Lensing Survey) is a dense redshift survey covering a 4 square degree region to a limiting R = 20.6. In the construction of the galaxy catalog and in the acquisition of spectroscopic targets, we paid careful attention to the survey completeness for lower surface brightness dwarf galaxies. Thus, although the survey covers a small area, it is a robust basis for computation of the slope of the faint end of the galaxy luminosity function to a limiting M_R = -13.3 + 5logh. We calculate the faint end slope in the R-band for the subset of SHELS galaxies with redshif ts in the range 0.02 <= z < 0.1, SHELS_{0.1}. This sample contains 532 galaxies with R< 20.6 and with a median surface brightness within the half light radius of SB_{50,R} = 21.82 mag arcsec^{-2}. We used this sample to make one of the few direct measurements of the dependence of the faint end of the…
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