论文标题
COSMOS2020:紫外线选择的星系$ z \ geq7.5 $
COSMOS2020: UV selected galaxies at $z\geq7.5$
论文作者
论文摘要
本文使用COSMOS2020光度目录为$ z \ geq7.5 $星系提供了新的搜索。通过深度成像调查在电源时期找到星系仍然在观察中具有挑战性。诸如宇宙之类的地面调查覆盖的较大区域可以在这些高红移时发现最明亮的星系。我们的Cosmos目录覆盖了$ 1.4 $ deg $^2 $,是由最新的Ultravista数据发布(DR4)构建的,结合了最终的Spitzer/IRAC COSMOS图像和Hyper-Suprime-Cam Subaru Strumitic Programing dr2 Release。我们确定$ 17 $新的$ 7.5 <z <10 $候选人来源,并确认$ 15 $先前出版的候选人。使用通过在多波段图像上拟合表面亮度模型提取的脱融化的光度法,我们选择了四个候选物,这些候选者将使用固定的光圈光度法拒绝。我们通过比较六个不同的光度红移估计值来测试所有候选者的鲁棒性。最后,我们在三个以$ z = 8,9,10 $为中心的红移垃圾箱中计算了Galaxy UV亮度功能。我们发现与以前的作品一致,我们发现最明亮的星系的数量密度$ m_ \ text {uv} <-21.5 $都没有明确的演变。猝灭效率或尘埃衰减的快速变化可以解释$ z \ sim 8 $和$ z \ sim 9之间的这种缺乏演变。对已经使用JWST和凯克望远镜计划的红移的光谱确认对于确认我们的结果至关重要。
This paper presents a new search for $z\geq7.5$ galaxies using the COSMOS2020 photometric catalogues. Finding galaxies at the reionization epoch through deep imaging surveys remains observationally challenging. The larger area covered by ground-based surveys like COSMOS enables the discovery of the brightest galaxies at these high redshifts. Covering $1.4$deg$^2$, our COSMOS catalogues were constructed from the latest UltraVISTA data release (DR4) combined with the final Spitzer/IRAC COSMOS images and the Hyper-Suprime-Cam Subaru Strategic Program DR2 release. We identify $17$ new $7.5<z<10$ candidate sources, and confirm $15$ previously published candidates. Using deblended photometry extracted by fitting surface brightness models on multi-band images, we select four candidates which would be rejected using fixed aperture photometry. We test the robustness of all our candidates by comparing six different photometric redshift estimates. Finally, we compute the galaxy UV luminosity function in three redshift bins centred at $z=8,9,10$. We find no clear evolution of the number density of the brightest galaxies $M_\text{UV}<-21.5$, in agreement with previous works. Rapid changes in the quenching efficiency or attenuation by dust could explain such lack of evolution between $z\sim 8$ and $z\sim 9. A spectroscopic confirmation of the redshifts, already planned with JWST and the Keck telescopes, will be essential to confirm our results.