The Very Faint End of the UV Luminosity Function over Cosmic Time: Constraints from the Local Group Fossil Record
Daniel R. Weisz, Benjamin D. Johnson, Charlie Conroy

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel method using Local Group galaxy star formation histories to reconstruct the faint end of the UV luminosity function up to redshift 5, revealing a steepening slope and providing insights beyond current observational capabilities.
Contribution
The study presents a new technique to estimate the faint UV luminosity function at high redshift using fossil records, extending beyond observational limits and offering a complementary approach.
Findings
Faint end slope steepens from -1.2 at z<1 to -1.6 at 4<z<5.
Reconstructed luminosity functions fit a Schechter function without a break.
Method is modestly affected by burstiness in star formation histories.
Abstract
We present a new technique to estimate the evolution of the very faint end of the UV luminosity function (LF) out to . Measured star formation histories (SFHs) from the fossil record of Local Group galaxies are used to reconstruct the LF down to M at and M at . Such faint limits are well beyond the current observational limits and are likely to remain beyond the limits of next generation facilities. The reconstructed LFs, when combined with direct measurements of the LFs at higher luminosity, are well-fit by a standard Schechter function with no evidence of a break to the faintest limits probed by this technique. The derived faint end slope, , steepens from at to at . We test the effects of burstiness in the SFHs and find the recovered LFs to be only modestly affected. Incompleteness…
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