Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA): Stellar mass functions by Hubble type
Lee S. Kelvin, Simon P. Driver, Aaron S. G. Robotham, Edward N., Taylor, Alister W. Graham, Mehmet Alpaslan, Ivan Baldry, Steven P. Bamford,, Amanda E. Bauer, Joss Bland-Hawthorn, Michael J. I. Brown, Matthew Colless,, Christopher J. Conselice, Benne W. Holwerda

TL;DR
This study estimates the galaxy stellar mass function by morphological type in the local universe, revealing that roughly half of the stellar mass resides in spheroidal structures and half in disks, with detailed proportions.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed division of the local galaxy stellar mass function by morphological type using a large, volume-limited sample.
Findings
Galaxy stellar mass function is well described by a double Schechter function.
Approximately 71% of stellar mass is in spheroid-dominated galaxies.
Stellar mass is roughly equally split between spheroidal and disk structures.
Abstract
We present an estimate of the galaxy stellar mass function and its division by morphological type in the local (0.025 < z < 0.06) Universe. Adopting robust morphological classifications as previously presented (Kelvin et al.) for a sample of 3,727 galaxies taken from the Galaxy And Mass Assembly survey, we define a local volume and stellar mass limited sub-sample of 2,711 galaxies to a lower stellar mass limit of M = 10^9.0 M_sun. We confirm that the galaxy stellar mass function is well described by a double Schechter function given by M* = 10^10.64 M_sun, {\alpha}1 = -0.43, {\phi}*1 = 4.18 dex^-1 Mpc^-3, {\alpha}2 = -1.50 and {\phi}*2 = 0.74 dex^-1 Mpc^-3. The constituent morphological-type stellar mass functions are well sampled above our lower stellar mass limit, excepting the faint little blue spheroid population of galaxies. We find approximately 71+3-4% of the stellar mass in the…
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