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Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA): The galaxy stellar mass function to $z=0.1$ from the r-band selected equatorial regions (1705.04074v1)

Published 11 May 2017 in astro-ph.GA

Abstract: We derive the low redshift galaxy stellar mass function (GSMF), inclusive of dust corrections, for the equatorial Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA) dataset covering 180 deg$2$. We construct the mass function using a density-corrected maximum volume method, using masses corrected for the impact of optically thick and thin dust. We explore the galactic bivariate brightness plane ($M_\star-\mu$), demonstrating that surface brightness effects do not systematically bias our mass function measurement above 10${7.5}$ M${\odot}$. The galaxy distribution in the $M-\mu$-plane appears well bounded, indicating that no substantial population of massive but diffuse or highly compact galaxies are systematically missed due to the GAMA selection criteria. The GSMF is {fit with} a double Schechter function, with $\mathcal M\star=10{10.78\pm0.01\pm0.20}M\odot$, $\phi\star_1=(2.93\pm0.40)\times10{-3}h_{70}3$Mpc${-3}$, $\alpha_1=-0.62\pm0.03\pm0.15$, $\phi\star_2=(0.63\pm0.10)\times10{-3}h_{70}3$Mpc${-3}$, and $\alpha_2=-1.50\pm0.01\pm0.15$. We find the equivalent faint end slope as previously estimated using the GAMA-I sample, although we find a higher value of $\mathcal M\star$. Using the full GAMA-II sample, we are able to fit the mass function to masses as low as $10{7.5}$ $M_\odot$, and assess limits to $10{6.5}$ $M_\odot$. Combining GAMA-II with data from G10-COSMOS we are able to comment qualitatively on the shape of the GSMF down to masses as low as $10{6}$ $M_\odot$. Beyond the well known upturn seen in the GSMF at $10{9.5}$ the distribution appears to maintain a single power-law slope from $109$ to $10{6.5}$. We calculate the stellar mass density parameter given our best-estimate GSMF, finding $\Omega_\star= 1.66{+0.24}_{-0.23}\pm0.97 h{-1}_{70} \times 10{-3}$, inclusive of random and systematic uncertainties.

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