Characterising the evolving $K$-band luminosity function using the UltraVISTA, CANDELS and HUDF surveys
Alice Mortlock, Ross J. McLure, Rebecca A. A. Bowler, Derek J. McLeod,, Esther Marmol-Queralto, Shaghayegh Parsa, James S. Dunlop, Victoria A. Bruce

TL;DR
This study analyzes the evolution of the K-band galaxy luminosity function up to redshift 3.75 using combined survey data, revealing a steep faint-end slope and a rapid evolution at intermediate magnitudes, with a new double Schechter function model.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive analysis of the evolving KLF using multiple surveys and proposes a simple double Schechter function model with fixed slopes and shared M_K* to describe the evolution.
Findings
Faint-end slope at z>0.25 is steep (-1.3 to -1.5).
Double Schechter function fits the data better at z<2.
The bright-end component diminishes significantly by z~3.
Abstract
We present the results of a new study of the K-band galaxy luminosity function (KLF) at redshifts z<3.75, based on a nested combination of the UltraVISTA, CANDELS and HUDF surveys. The large dynamic range in luminosity spanned by this new dataset (3-4 dex over the full redshift range) is sufficient to clearly demonstrate for the first time that the faint-end slope of the KLF at z>0.25 is relatively steep (-1.3<alpha<-1.5 for a single Schechter function), in good agreement with recent theoretical and phenomenological models. Moreover, based on our new dataset we find that a double Schechter function provides a significantly improved description of the KLF at z<2. At redshifts z>0.25 the evolution of the KLF is remarkably smooth, with little or no evolution evident at faint (M_K>-20.5) or bright magnitudes (M_K<-24.5). Instead, the KLF is seen to evolve rapidly at intermediate magnitudes,…
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