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Probing the earliest phases in the formation of massive galaxies with simulated HST+JWST imaging data from Illustris

Authors :
Ángela García-Argumánez
Pablo G. Pérez-González
Armando Gil de Paz
Gregory F. Snyder
Pablo Arrabal Haro
Micaela B. Bagley
Steven L. Finkelstein
Jeyhan S. Kartaltepe
Anton Koekemoer
Casey Papovich
Nor Pirzkal
Harry C. Ferguson
L. Y. Aaron Yung
Marianna Annunziatella
Nikko J. Cleri
M. C. Cooper
Luca Costantin
Benne W. Holwerda
Rosa María Mérida
Caitlin Rose
Mauro Giavalisco
Norman A. Grogin
Dale D. Kocevski
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
arXiv, 2022.

Abstract

We use the Illustris-1 simulation to explore the capabilities of the $\textit{Hubble}$ and $\textit{James Webb Space Telescope}$ data to analyze the stellar populations in high-redshift galaxies, taking advantage of the combined depth, spatial resolution, and wavelength coverage. For that purpose, we use simulated broad-band ACS, WFC3 and NIRCam data and 2-dimensional stellar population synthesis (2D-SPS) to derive the integrated star formation history (SFH) of massive (M$_{\ast}>10^{10}\,$M$_{\odot}$) simulated galaxies at $110^{11}\,$M$_{\odot}$ galaxy. In particular, we explore the potential of HST and JWST datasets reaching a depth similar to those of the CANDELS and ongoing CEERS observations, respectively, and concentrate on determining the capabilities of this dataset for characterizing the first episodes in the SFH of local M$_{\ast}>10^{11}\,$M$_{\odot}$ galaxies by studying their progenitors at $z>1$. The 2D-SPS method presented in this paper has been calibrated to robustly recover the cosmic times when the first star formation episodes occurred in massive galaxies, i.e., the first stages in their integrated SFHs. In particular, we discuss the times when the first 1% to 50% of their total stellar mass formed in the simulation. We demonstrate that we can recover these ages with typical median systematic offset of less than 5% and scatter around 20%-30%. According to our measurements on Illustris data, we are able to recover that local M$_{\ast}>10^{11}\,$M$_{\odot}$ galaxies would have started their formation by $z=16$, forming the first 5% of their stellar mass present at $z \sim 1$ by $z=4.5$, 10% by $z=3.7$, and 25% by $z=2.7$.<br />Comment: 28 pages, 13 figures, 4 tables. ApJ in press. Summary of changes from original submission: the major change is that we now include in Sec. 6 the comparison of the results obtained for our sample of massive 1 < z < 4 progenitors with those obtained by considering all massive galaxies at 1 < z < 4 in the simulated images. Several figures and sections have been updated

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9c7fc62c615bfd82fb12c5d92223f89d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.2207.14062