AN IMAGING K-BAND SURVEY - II: THE REDSHIFT SURVEY AND GALAXY EVOLUTION IN THE INFRARED

Abstract

We present a redshift survey of 124 galaxies, from an imaging K-band survey complete to K 17.3. The optical-to-infrared colours are consistent with the range expected from synthetic galaxy spectra, although there are some cases of very red nuclei. Our data show no evidence for evolution of the K-band luminosity function at z<0.5, and the results are well described by a Schechter function with MK*=-22.750.13+510h and φ*=0.0260.003 h3 Mpc-3. This is a somewhat higher normalization than has been found by previous workers, and it removes much of the excess in faint K and B counts with respect to a no-evolution model. However, we do find evidence for evolution at z>0.5: MK* is approximately 0.75 mag. brighter at z=1. This luminosity evolution is balanced by a reduced normalization at high redshift. The overall evolution is thus opposite to that expected in simple merger-dominated models.

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