The Evolving Faint-End of the Luminosity Function
Abstract
We investigate the evolution of the faint-end slope of the luminosity function, , using semi-analytical modeling of galaxy formation. In agreement with observations, we find that the slope can be fitted well by , with a=-1.13 and b=-0.1. The main driver for the evolution in is the evolution in the underlying dark matter mass function. Sub-L_* galaxies reside in dark matter halos that occupy a different part of the mass function. At high redshifts, this part of the mass function is steeper than at low redshifts and hence is steeper. Supernova feedback in general causes the same relative flattening with respect to the dark matter mass function. The faint-end slope at low redshifts is dominated by field galaxies and at high redshifts by cluster galaxies. The evolution of in each of these environments is different, with field galaxies having a slope b=-0.14 and cluster galaxies b=-0.05. The transition from cluster-dominated to field-dominated faint-end slope occurs roughly at a redshift , and suggests that a single linear fit to the overall evolution of might not be appropriate. Furthermore, this result indicates that tidal disruption of dwarf galaxies in clusters cannot play a significant role in explaining the evolution of at z< z_*. In addition we find that different star formation efficiencies a_* in the Schmidt-Kennicutt-law and supernovae-feedback efficiencies generally do not strongly influence the evolution of .
Cite
@article{arxiv.0707.2790,
title = {The Evolving Faint-End of the Luminosity Function},
author = {S. Khochfar and J. Silk and R. A. Windhorst and R. E. Ryan},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0707.2790},
year = {2009}
}
Comments
4 pages, replaced with version accepted to ApJL, minor changes to figures