The Evolution of the Galaxy Stellar Mass Function at z= 4-8: A Steepening Low-mass-end Slope with Increasing Redshift
Mimi Song, Steven L. Finkelstein, Matthew L. N. Ashby, A. Grazian, Yu, Lu, Casey Papovich, Brett Salmon, Rachel S. Somerville, Mark Dickinson, K., Duncan, Sandy M. Faber, Giovanni G. Fazio, Henry C. Ferguson, Adriano, Fontana, Yicheng Guo, Nimish Hathi, Seong-Kook Lee

TL;DR
This study measures galaxy stellar mass functions at redshifts 4-8, revealing a steepening low-mass-end slope with increasing redshift, which enhances understanding of galaxy evolution in the early universe.
Contribution
It provides improved constraints on the GSMFs at high redshift using deep multi-wavelength data and introduces a hybrid method to accurately measure the mass-UV relation.
Findings
The low-mass-end slope of GSMFs steepens from -1.55 at z=4 to -2.25 at z=8.
The stellar mass density increases by a factor of about 10 from z=7 to z=4.
The UV-selected sample includes approximately 4500 galaxies across 280 arcmin².
Abstract
We present galaxy stellar mass functions (GSMFs) at 4-8 from a rest-frame ultraviolet (UV) selected sample of 4500 galaxies, found via photometric redshifts over an area of 280 arcmin in the CANDELS/GOODS fields and the Hubble Ultra Deep Field. The deepest Spitzer/IRAC data yet-to-date and the relatively large volume allow us to place a better constraint at both the low- and high-mass ends of the GSMFs compared to previous space-based studies from pre-CANDELS observations. Supplemented by a stacking analysis, we find a linear correlation between the rest-frame UV absolute magnitude at 1500 \AA\ () and logarithmic stellar mass () that holds for galaxies with . We use simulations to validate our method of measuring the slope of the - relation, finding that the bias is minimized with a hybrid…
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