The $z \gtrsim 9$ galaxy UV luminosity function from the JWST Advanced Deep Extragalactic Survey: insights into early galaxy evolution and reionization
Lily Whitler, Daniel P. Stark, Michael W. Topping, Brant Robertson, Marcia Rieke, Kevin N. Hainline, Ryan Endsley, Zuyi Chen, William M. Baker, Rachana Bhatawdekar, Andrew J. Bunker, Stefano Carniani, St\'ephane Charlot, Jacopo Chevallard, Emma Curtis-Lake, Eiichi Egami

TL;DR
This study presents the UV luminosity function at redshifts above 9 from JWST data, revealing a large population of faint galaxies and insights into early galaxy evolution and reionization.
Contribution
First measurement of the $z extgreater9$ UV luminosity function from JWST, highlighting a steep faint-end slope and excess bright galaxies at high redshift.
Findings
Detected hundreds of $z extgreater9$ galaxy candidates down to $M_{UV} extless -17$.
Found an excess of bright galaxies at $z extgreater12$ inconsistent with many models.
Measured steep faint-end slopes of $-2.5 extless \alpha extless -2.3$, indicating many faint galaxies.
Abstract
The high-redshift UV luminosity function provides important insights into the evolution of early galaxies. JWST has revealed an unexpectedly large population of bright () galaxies at , implying fundamental changes in the star forming properties of galaxies at increasingly early times. However, constraining the fainter population () has been more challenging. In this work, we present the UV luminosity function from the JWST Advanced Deep Extragalactic Survey. We calculate the UV luminosity function from several hundred galaxy candidates that reach UV luminosities of in redshift bins of (309 candidates) and (63 candidates). We search for candidates at and find none. We also estimate the luminosity function from the …
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
