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Galaxy number counts - V. Ultradeep counts: the Herschel and Hubble deep fields

Metcalfe, N.; Shanks, T.; Campos, A.; McCracken, H.J.; Fong, R.

Authors

T. Shanks

A. Campos

H.J. McCracken

R. Fong



Abstract

We present u, b, r and i galaxy number counts and colours from both the North and South Hubble Space Telescope Deep Fields and the William Herschel Deep Field. The latter comprises a 7×7 arcmin2 area of sky, reaching b28.5 at its deepest. Following Metcalfe et al., we show that simple Bruzual & Charlot evolutionary models which assume exponentially increasing star formation rates with look-back time and q0=0.05 continue to give excellent fits to galaxy counts and colours in the deep imaging data. With q0=0.5, an extra population of 'disappearing dwarf' galaxies is required to fit the optical counts. We further find that the (r−i):(b−r) colour–colour diagrams show distinctive features corresponding to two populations of early- and late-type galaxies which are well fitted by features in the Bruzual & Charlot models. The (r−i):(b−r) data also suggest the existence of an intrinsically faint population of early-types at z0.1 with similar properties to the 'disappearing dwarf' population required if q0=0.5. The outstanding issue remaining for the early-type models is the dwarf-dominated initial mass function (IMF), which we invoke to reduce the numbers of z>1 galaxies predicted at K<19. For the spiral models, the main issue is that even with the inclusion of internal dust absorption at the AB=0.3 mag level, the model predicts too blue (u−b) colours for late-type galaxies at z1. Despite these possible problems, we conclude that these simple models with monotonically increasing star formation rates broadly fit the data out to z3. We compare these results for the star formation rate history with those from the different approach of Madau et al. We conclude that when the effects of internal dust absorption in spirals are taken into account the results from this latter approach are completely consistent with the τ=9 Gyr, exponentially rising star formation rate density out to z≈3 which fits the deepest, optical/IR galaxy count and colour data. When we compare the observed and predicted galaxy counts for UV dropouts in the range 2z3.5 from the data of Steidel et al. and Madau et al., and new data from the Herschel and HDF-S fields, we find excellent agreement, indicating that the space density of galaxies may not have changed much between z=0 and z=3, and identifying the Lyman-break galaxies with the bright end of the evolved spiral luminosity function. Making the same comparison for B dropout galaxies in the range 3.5z4.5 we find that the space density of intrinsically bright galaxies remains the same, but the space density of faint galaxies drops by a factor of 5, consistent with the idea that L* galaxies were already in place at z≈4 but that dwarf galaxies may have formed later at 3z4.

Citation

Metcalfe, N., Shanks, T., Campos, A., McCracken, H., & Fong, R. (2001). Galaxy number counts - V. Ultradeep counts: the Herschel and Hubble deep fields. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 323(4), 795-830. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-8711.2001.04168.x

Journal Article Type Article
Publication Date May 30, 2001
Deposit Date Apr 29, 2008
Publicly Available Date Mar 29, 2024
Journal Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Print ISSN 0035-8711
Electronic ISSN 1365-2966
Publisher Royal Astronomical Society
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 323
Issue 4
Pages 795-830
DOI https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-8711.2001.04168.x
Keywords Galaxies, Evolution, Photometry, Cosmology, Observations.

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