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The [O II] lambda 3727 Luminosity Function at z ~ 1

Astrophysics 2010-08-19 v3

Abstract

We measure the evolution of the [OII]lambda 3727 luminosity function at 0.75<z<1.45 using high-resolution spectroscopy of ~14,000 galaxies observed by the DEEP2 galaxy redshift survey. We find that brighter than L_{OII}=10^{42} erg s^(-1) the luminosity function is well-represented by a power law dN/dL ~ L^{\alpha} with slope \alpha ~ -3. The number density of [OII] emitting galaxies above this luminosity declines by a factor of >~2.5 between z ~ 1.35 and z ~ 0.84. In the limit of no number-density evolution, the characteristic [OII] luminosity, L^*_[OII], defined as the luminosity where the space density equals 10^{-3.5} dex^{-1} Mpc^{-3}, declines by a factor of ~1.8 over the same redshift interval. Assuming that L_[OII] is proportional to the star-formation rate (SFR), and negligible change in the typical dust attenuation in galaxies at fixed [OII] luminosity, the measured decline in L^*_[OII] implies a ~25% per Gyr decrease in the amount of star formation in galaxies during this epoch. Adopting a faint-end power-law slope of -1.3\pm0.2, we derive the comoving SFR density in four redshift bins centered around z~1 by integrating the observed [OII] luminosity function using a local, empirical calibration between L_[OII] and SFR, which statistically accounts for variations in dust attenuation and metallicity among galaxies. We find that our estimate of the SFR density at z~1 is consistent with previous measurements based on a variety of independent SFR indicators.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0811.3035,
  title  = {The [O II] lambda 3727 Luminosity Function at z ~ 1},
  author = {Guangtun Zhu and John Moustakas and Michael R. Blanton},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0811.3035},
  year   = {2010}
}

Comments

10 pages, 6 figures, 2 tables, resubmitted to ApJ, in emulateapj style. Comparison with narrow-band observations added. Wavelength coverage included into complete function, little effects. The data is available on http://bias.cosmo.fas.nyu.edu/galevolution/

R2 v1 2026-06-21T11:43:06.862Z