Empirical estimates of how massive galaxies can be in {\Lambda}CDM
Miguel Enr\'iquez-Vargas, Aldo Rodr\'iguez-Puebla, Aditya Manuwal, L. Y. Aaron Yung, Vladimir Avila-Reese, Carlo Cannarozzo

TL;DR
This paper uses empirical statistical methods to estimate the maximum masses and luminosities of the most extreme galaxies across different redshifts, considering observational uncertainties and theoretical limits.
Contribution
It provides new empirical limits on galaxy masses and luminosities in { extLambda}CDM, incorporating uncertainties and comparing with observations across cosmic time.
Findings
Maximum galaxy stellar mass varies with survey area and redshift.
High-redshift massive galaxies approach the theoretical maximum baryonic mass.
Accounting for measurement uncertainties reduces the inferred maximum stellar mass by up to 1 dex.
Abstract
Using Extreme Value Statistics applied to the observed galaxy stellar mass and the UV luminosity functions, we empirically estimate masses and luminosities of the most extreme galaxies in cosmological surveys, including the full sky. We incorporate uncertainties in stellar mass measurements (Eddington bias) and the scatter in the stellar-halo mass relation to derive empirical limits for galaxies residing in the most massive halos. The maximum observed strongly depends on survey area and redshift, ranging from for full-sky surveys at to at . Massive galaxies, particularly at high redshift, approach the theoretical maximum baryonic mass available in halos , consistent with previous claims. Accounting for measurement uncertainties significantly reduces…
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