Stellar masses of SDSS-III BOSS galaxies at z~0.5 and constraints to galaxy formation models
Claudia Maraston, Janine Pforr, Bruno M. Henriques, Daniel Thomas,, David Wake, Joel R. Brownstein, Diego Capozzi, Jeremy Tinker, Kevin Bundy,, Ramin A. Skibba, Alessandra Beifiori, Robert C. Nichol, Edd Edmondson, Donald, P. Schneider, Yanmei Chen, Karen L. Masters

TL;DR
This study measures stellar masses of BOSS galaxies at z~0.5, compares them with galaxy formation models, and finds discrepancies in the abundance and properties of massive galaxies, providing insights into galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed stellar mass measurements for BOSS galaxies at z~0.5 and compares these with semi-analytic models, highlighting areas of agreement and discrepancy.
Findings
BOSS galaxy stellar masses peak at logM ~ 11.3
Massive galaxy abundance agrees with previous studies
Models lack the most massive galaxies and show color-mass relation issues
Abstract
We calculate stellar masses for massive luminous galaxies at redshift 0.2-0.7 using the first two years of data from the Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS). Stellar masses are obtained by fitting model spectral energy distributions to u,g,r,i,z magnitudes, and simulations with mock galaxies are used to understand how well the templates recover the stellar mass. Accurate BOSS spectroscopic redshifts are used to constrain the fits. We find that the distribution of stellar masses in BOSS is narrow (Delta log M~0.5 dex) and peaks at about logM ~ 11.3 (for a Kroupa initial stellar mass function), and that the mass sampling is uniform over the redshift range 0.2 to 0.6, in agreement with the intended BOSS target selection. The galaxy masses probed by BOSS extend over ~10^{12} M, providing unprecedented measurements of the high-mass end of the galaxy mass function. We find that the…
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