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The HI Mass Function of Star-forming Galaxies at $z\approx1$

Authors :
Chowdhury, Aditya
Kanekar, Nissim
Chengalur, Jayaram N.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

We present the first estimate, based on direct HI 21 cm observations, of the HI mass function (HIMF) of star-forming galaxies at $z\approx1$, obtained by combining our measurement of the scaling relation between HI mass ($M_{HI}$) and B-band luminosity ($M_B$) of star-forming galaxies with literature estimates of the B-band luminosity function at $z\approx1$. We determined the $M_{HI}-M_B$ relation by using the GMRT-CATz1 survey of the DEEP2 fields to measure the average HI mass of blue galaxies at $z=0.74-1.45$ in three separate $M_B$ subsamples. This was done by separately stacking the HI 21 cm emission signals of the galaxies in each subsample to detect, at (3.5-4.4)$\sigma$ significance, the average HI 21 cm emission of each subsample. We find that the $M_{HI}-M_B$ relation at $z\approx1$ is consistent with that at $z\approx0$. We combine our estimate of the $M_{HI}-M_B$ relation at $z\approx1$ with the B-band luminosity function at $z\approx1$ to determine the HIMF at $z\approx1$. We find that the number density of galaxies with $M_{HI}>10^{10} M_\odot$ (higher than the knee of the local HIMF) at $z\approx1$ is a factor of $\approx4-5$ higher than that at $z\approx0$, for a wide range of assumed scatters in the $M_{HI}-M_B$ relation. We rule out the hypothesis that the number density of galaxies with $M_{HI}>10^{10} M_\odot$ remains unchanged between $z \approx 1$ and $z\approx0$ at $\gtrsim99.7$\% confidence. This is the first statistically significant evidence for evolution in the HIMF of galaxies from the epoch of cosmic noon.<br />Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures; minor changes to match version in press at ApJ Letters

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2404.06546
Document Type :
Working Paper