Evolution of Galaxy Luminosity and Stellar-Mass Functions since $z=1$ with the Dark Energy Survey Science Verification Data
D. Capozzi, J. Etherington, D. Thomas, C. Maraston, E. S. Rykoff, I., Sevilla-Noarbe, K. Bechtol, M. Carrasco Kind, A. Drlica-Wagner, J. Pforr, J., Gschwend, A. Carnero Rosell, P. Pellegrini, M. A. G. Maia, L. N. da Costa, A., Benoit-L\'evy, M. E. C. Swanson, R. H. Wechsler

TL;DR
This study uses the Dark Energy Survey data to analyze the evolution of galaxy luminosity and stellar-mass functions from redshift 0 to 1, revealing consistent shapes and mass-dependent evolution over cosmic time.
Contribution
First to analyze galaxy luminosity and stellar-mass functions evolution using DES Science Verification data with photometric redshifts, demonstrating methodological robustness and new insights.
Findings
Galaxy luminosity and stellar-mass functions have a double-Schechter shape at low redshift.
Galaxy stellar-mass density decreases with redshift, while luminosity density remains nearly constant.
Evidence of mass-dependent evolution of the galaxy stellar-mass function.
Abstract
We present the first study of the evolution of the galaxy luminosity and stellar-mass functions (GLF and GSMF) carried out by the Dark Energy Survey (DES). We describe the COMMODORE galaxy catalogue selected from Science Verification images. This catalogue is made of galaxies at over a sky area of with -band limiting magnitude . Such characteristics are unprecedented for galaxy catalogues and they enable us to study the evolution of GLF and GSMF at homogeneously with the same statistically-rich data-set and free of cosmic variance effects. The aim of this study is twofold: i) we want to test our method based on the use of photometric-redshift probability density functions against literature results obtained with spectroscopic redshifts; ii) we want to shed light on the way galaxies…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Adaptive optics and wavefront sensing
