Back to Search Start Over

GMASS ultradeep spectroscopy of galaxies at z~2 - VII. Sample selection and spectroscopy

Authors :
Kurk, Jaron
Cimatti, Andrea
Daddi, Emanuele
Mignoli, Marco
Pozzetti, Lucia
Dickinson, Mark
Bolzonella, Micol
Zamorani, Gianni
Cassata, Paolo
Rodighiero, Giulia
Franceschini, Alberto
Renzini, Alvio
Rosati, Piero
Halliday, Claire
Berta, Stefano
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

The populations of both quiescent and actively star-forming galaxies at 1<z<2 are still under-represented in our spectroscopic census of galaxies throughout the history of the Universe. In the light of galaxy formation models, however, the evolution of galaxies at these redshifts is of pivotal importance and merits further investigation. We therefore designed a spectroscopic observing campaign of a sample of both massive, quiescent and star-forming galaxies at z>1.4, called Galaxy Mass Assembly ultra-deep Spectroscopic Survey (GMASS). To determine redshifts and physical properties, such as metallicity, dust content, dynamical masses, and star formation history, we performed ultra-deep spectroscopy with the red-sensitive optical spectrograph FORS2 at the VLT. Our sample consists of objects, within the CDFS/GOODS area, detected at 4.5 micron, to be sensitive to stellar mass rather than star formation intensity. The spectroscopic targets were selected with a photometric redshift constraint (z>1.4) and magnitude constraints (B(AB)<26, I(AB)<26.5), which should ensure that these are faint, distant, and fairly massive galaxies. We present the sample selection, survey design, observations, data reduction, and spectroscopic redshifts. Up to 30 hours of spectroscopy of 174 spectroscopic targets and 70 additional objects enabled us to determine 210 redshifts, of which 145 are at z>1.4. From the redshifts and photometry, we deduce that the BzK selection criteria are efficient (82%) and suffer low contamination (11%). Several papers based on the GMASS survey show its value for studies of galaxy formation and evolution. We publicly release the redshifts and reduced spectra. In combination with existing and on-going additional observations in CDFS/GOODS, this data set provides a legacy for future studies of distant galaxies.<br />Comment: Accepted by A&A in August 2012, 45 pages, public release of reduced spectra currently on www.mpe.mpg.de/~kurk/gmass

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1209.1561
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201117847