It is well known that the mass function for_halos_ in CDM cosmology is a
relatively steep power law for low masses, possibly too steep to be consistent
with observations. But how steep is the_galaxy_ mass function? We have analyzed
the stellar and gas mass functions of the first massive luminous objects formed
in a \Lambda CDM universe, as calculated in the numerical simulation described
in Gnedin (2000ab). We found that while the dark matter mass function is steep,
the stellar and gas mass functions are flatter for low mass objects. The
stellar mass function is consistently flat at the low mass end. Moreover, while
the gas mass function follows the dark matter mass function until reionization
at z~7, between z=7 and z=4, the gas mass function also flattens considerably
at the low mass end. At z=4, the gas and stellar mass functions are fit by a
Schechter function with \alpha ~ -1.2 +/- 0.1, significantly shallower than the
dark matter halo mass function and consistent with some recent observations.
The baryonic mass functions are shallower because (a) the dark matter halo mass
function is consistent with the Press-Schechter formulation at low masses n(M)
M^-2 and (b) heating/cooling and ionization processes appear to cause baryons
to collect in halos with the relationship M_b M_d^4 at low masses. Combining
(a) and (b) gives n(M_b) M_b^-5/4, comparable to the simulation results. Thus,
the well known observational fact that low mass galaxies are underabundant as
compared to expectations from numerical dark matter simulations or
Press-Schechter modeling of CDM universes emerges naturally from these results,
implying that perhaps no ``new physics'' beyond the standard model is needed.Comment: Submitted to ApJ, 17 pages including 6 figure