The z 9 galaxy UV luminosity function from the JWST Advanced Deep Extragalactic Survey: insights into early galaxy evolution and reionization

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 (MUV -20) galaxies at z10, implying fundamental changes in the star forming properties of galaxies at increasingly early times. However, constraining the fainter population (MUV -18) has been more challenging. In this work, we present the z9 UV luminosity function from the JWST Advanced Deep Extragalactic Survey. We calculate the UV luminosity function from several hundred z9 galaxy candidates that reach UV luminosities of MUV-17 in redshift bins of z9-12 (309 candidates) and z12-16 (63 candidates). We search for candidates at z16-22.5 and find none. We also estimate the z14-16 luminosity function from the z≥14 subset of the z12-16 sample. Consistent with other measurements, we find an excess of bright galaxies that is in tension with many theoretical models, especially at z12. However, we also find high number densities at -18 MUV -17, suggesting that there is a larger population of faint galaxies than expected, as well as bright ones. From our parametric fits for the luminosity function, we find steep faint end slopes of -2.5α-2.3, suggesting a large population of faint (MUV -17) galaxies. Combined, the high normalization and steep faint end slope of the luminosity function could imply that the reionization process is appreciably underway as early as z=10.

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