The evolution of the UV luminosity and stellar mass functions of Lyman-alpha emitters from z~2 to z~6
S\'ergio Santos, David Sobral, Josh Butterworth, Ana Paulino-Afonso,, Bruno Ribeiro, Elisabete da Cunha, Jo\~ao Calhau, Ali Ahmad Khostovan, Jorryt, Matthee, Pablo Arrabal Haro

TL;DR
This study investigates how the UV luminosity and stellar mass functions of Lyman-alpha emitters evolve from redshift 2 to 6, revealing their potential role in cosmic reionization and how their properties change over time.
Contribution
It provides new measurements of the evolution of UV and stellar mass functions of LAEs from z~2 to z~6, including correlations with Lyman-alpha luminosity and implications for reionization.
Findings
UV luminosity function shows brightening with redshift
Stellar mass function indicates increasing characteristic mass with redshift
LAEs' densities approach those of typical galaxies at high redshift
Abstract
We measure the evolution of the rest-frame UV luminosity function (LF) and the stellar mass function (SMF) of Lyman-alpha (Lya) emitters (LAEs) from z~2 to z~6 by exploring ~4000 LAEs from the SC4K sample. We find a correlation between Lya luminosity (LLya) and rest-frame UV (M_UV), with best-fit M_UV=-1.6+-0.2 log10(LLya/erg/s)+47+-12 and a shallower relation between LLya and stellar mass (Mstar), with best-fit log10( Mstar/Msun)=0.9+-0.1 log10(LLya/erg/s)-28+-4.0. An increasing LLya cut predominantly lowers the number density of faint M_UV and low Mstar LAEs. We estimate a proxy for the full UV LFs and SMFs of LAEs with simple assumptions of the faint end slope. For the UV LF, we find a brightening of the characteristic UV luminosity (M_UV*) with increasing redshift and a decrease of the characteristic number density (Phi*). For the SMF, we measure a characteristic stellar mass…
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