New redshift z ~ 9 galaxies in the Hubble Frontier Fields: Implications for early evolution of the UV luminosity density
Derek J. McLeod, Ross J. McLure, James S. Dunlop, Brant E. Robertson,, Richard S. Ellis, Thomas T. Targett

TL;DR
This study searches for galaxies at redshift z ~ 9 in the Hubble Frontier Fields, finding 12 candidates and analyzing their implications for early galaxy evolution and the UV luminosity density decline.
Contribution
It provides a new, robust sample of z ~ 9 galaxies and refines the understanding of the UV luminosity density evolution from z ~ 8 to 9.
Findings
12 z ~ 9 galaxy candidates identified
UV luminosity density shows a smooth decline from z ~ 8 to 9
Supports extended early galaxy evolution scenario
Abstract
We present the results of a new search for galaxies at redshift z ~ 9 in the first two Hubble Frontier Fields with completed HST WFC3/IR and ACS imaging. To ensure robust photometric redshift solutions, and to minimize incompleteness, we confine our search to objects with H_{160} < 28.6 (AB mag), consider only image regions with an rms noise sigma_{160} > 30 mag (within a 0.5-arcsec diameter aperture), and insist on detections in both H_{160} and J_{140}. The result is a survey covering an effective area (after accounting for magnification) of 10.9 sq. arcmin, which yields 12 galaxies at 8.4 < z < 9.5. Within the Abell-2744 cluster and parallel fields we confirm the three brightest objects reported by Ishigaki et al. (2014), but recover only one of the four z > 8.4 sources reported by Zheng et al. (2014). In the MACSJ0416.1-240 cluster field we report five objects, and explain why each…
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