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The WISE satellite surveyed the entire sky multiple times in four infrared wavelengths (3.4, 4.6, 12, and $22,mu$m; Wright et al. 2010). The unprecedented combination of coverage area and depth gives us the opportunity to measure the luminosity function of galaxies, one of the fundamental quantities in the study of them, at $2.4 mu$m to an unparalleled level of formal statistical accuracy in the near infrared. The big advantage of measuring luminosity functions at wavelengths in the window $approx 2$ to $3.5,mu$m is that it correlates more closely to the total stellar mass in galaxies than others. In this paper we report on the parameters for the $2.4,mu$m luminosity function of galaxies obtained from applying the spectroluminosity functional based methods defined in Lake et al. (2017b) to the data sets described in Lake et al. (2017a) using the mean and covariance of $2.4,mu$m normalized SEDs from Lake & Wright (2016). In terms of single Schechter function parameters evaluated at the present epoch, the combined result is: $phi_star = 5.8 pm [0.3_{mathrm{stat}},, 0.3_{mathrm{sys}}] times 10^{-3} operatorname{Mpc}^{-3}$, $L_star = 6.4 pm [0.1_{mathrm{stat}},, 0.3_{mathrm{sys}}] times 10^{10}, L_{2.4,mumathrm{m},odot}$ ($M_star = -21.67 pm [0.02_{mathrm{stat}},, 0.05_{mathrm{sys}}]operatorname{AB mag}$), and $alpha = -1.050 pm [0.004_{mathrm{stat}},, 0.03_{mathrm{sys}}]$, corresponding to a galaxy number density of $0.08operatorname{Mpc}^{-3}$ brighter than $10^6, L_{2.4,mumathrm{m},odot}$ ($10^{-3} operatorname{Mpc}^{-3}$ brighter than $L_star$) and a $2.4,mu$m luminosity density equivalent to $3.8times10^{8},L_{2.4,mumathrm{m},odot}operatorname{Mpc}^{-3}$. $ldots$
The WISE satellite surveyed the entire sky multiple times in four infrared (IR) wavelengths ($3.4, 4.6, 12,$ and $22, mu$m, Wright et al. 2010). This all-sky IR photometric survey makes it possible to leverage many of the large publicly available spe
Local infrared (IR) luminosity functions (LFs) are necessary benchmarks for high-redshift IR galaxy evolution studies. Any accurate IR LF evolution studies require accordingly accurate local IR LFs. We present infrared galaxy LFs at redshifts redshif
We determine the 22$mu$m luminosity evolution and luminosity function for quasars from a data set of over 20,000 objects obtained by combining flux-limited Sloan Digital Sky Survey optical and Wide field Infrared Survey Explorer mid-infrared data. We
The dielectric function of interstellar dust material is modeled using observations of extinction and polarization in the infrared, together with estimates for the mass of interstellar dust. The astrodust material is assumed to be a mix of amorphous
We present an analysis of star formation and nuclear activity of about 28000 galaxies in a volume-limited sample taken from SDSS DR4 low-redshift catalogue (LRC) taken from the New York University Value Added Galaxy Catalogue (NYU-VAGC) of Blanton et