The VIPERS Multi-Lambda Survey. II. Diving with massive galaxies in 22 square degrees since z = 1.5
T. Moutard, S. Arnouts, O. Ilbert, J. Coupon, I. Davidzon, L. Guzzo,, P. Hudelot, H. J. McCracken, L. Van Waerbeke, G. E. Morrison, O. Le F\`evre,, V. Comte, M. Bolzonella, A. Fritz, B. Garilli, and M. Scodeggio

TL;DR
This study analyzes the evolution of the galaxy stellar mass function from redshift 0.2 to 1.5 using a large, multi-wavelength survey, revealing insights into galaxy quenching and mass assembly processes.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive measurement of the galaxy stellar mass function over a large area and redshift range, highlighting the importance of photometric calibration and galaxy quenching mechanisms.
Findings
Massive quiescent galaxies increase by a factor of 2 from z~1 to z~0.2.
Star formation is suppressed above a stellar mass of 10^10.64 M_sun across 0.2<z<1.5.
An excess of low-mass quiescent galaxies at low redshift is observed.
Abstract
We investigate the evolution of the galaxy stellar mass function (SMF) and stellar mass density from redshift z=0.2 to z=1.5 of a <22-selected sample with highly reliable photometric redshifts and over an unprecedentedly large area. Our study is based on NIR observations carried out with WIRCam at CFHT over the footprint of the VIPERS spectroscopic survey and benefits from the high quality optical photometry from the CFHTLS and UV observations with the GALEX satellite. The accuracy of our photometric redshifts is < 0.03 and 0.05 for the bright (<22.5) and faint (>22.5) samples, respectively. The SMF is measured with ~760,000 galaxies down to =22 and over an effective area of ~22.4 deg, the latter of which drastically reduces the statistical uncertainties (i.e. Poissonian error & cosmic variance). We point out the importance of a careful…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Scientific Research and Discoveries
