The evolution of the cluster optical galaxy luminosity function between z=0.4 and 0.9 in the DAFT/FADA survey
Nicolas Martinet, Florence Durret, Loic Guennou, Christophe Adami,, Andrea Biviano, M. P. Ulmer, Douglas Clowe, Claire Halliday, Olivier Ilbert,, Isabel Marquez, Mischa Schirmer

TL;DR
This study analyzes the evolution of galaxy luminosity functions in clusters between redshifts 0.4 and 0.9, revealing how galaxy populations and their properties change over cosmic time.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed comparison of red and blue galaxy luminosity functions in clusters across this redshift range, highlighting galaxy evolution and cluster assembly processes.
Findings
Red GLFs show a steeper faint end at lower redshifts.
Blue GLFs have a consistently steep faint end, independent of redshift.
Red sequence galaxies become more prominent in more massive clusters over time.
Abstract
We compute optical galaxy luminosity functions (GLFs) in the B, V, R, and I rest-frame bands for one of the largest medium-to-high-redshift (0.4 < z < 0.9) cluster samples to date in order to probe the abundance of faint galaxies in clusters. We also study how the GLFs depend on cluster redshift, mass, and substructure, and compare the GLFs of clusters with those of the field. We separately investigate the GLFs of blue and red-sequence (RS) galaxies to understand the evolution of different cluster populations. We find that the shapes of our GLFs are similar for the B, V, R, and I bands with a drop at the red GLF faint end that is more pronounced at high-redshift: alpha(red) ~ -0.5 at 0.40 < z < 0.65 and alpha(red) > 0.1 at 0.65 < z < 0.90. The blue GLFs have a steeper faint end (alpha(blue) ~ -1.6) than the red GLFs, that appears to be independent of redshift. For the full cluster…
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