EROs found behind lensing clusters: II.Empirical properties, classification, and SED modelling based on multi-wavelength observations
A. Hempel (1), D. Schaerer (1, 3), E. Egami (2), R. Pell\'o (3), M., Wise (4), J. Richard (5, 3), J.-F. Le Borgne (3), J.-P. Kneib (6) ((1), Observatoire de Gen\'e ve, (2) Steward Observatory, (3) Observatoire, Midi-Pyr\'en\'ees, (4) Astronomical Institute Anton Pannekoek

TL;DR
This study investigates the properties, classification, and SED modeling of extremely red galaxies behind lensing clusters using multi-wavelength data, revealing their dusty starburst nature and similarities to other red galaxy populations.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed empirical analysis of EROs behind lensing clusters, combining multi-wavelength observations and SED modeling to characterize their nature.
Findings
Most EROs are at redshifts 0.7-1.5.
A significant fraction are dusty starbursts or (U)LIRGs.
No strong AGN activity detected.
Abstract
We study the properties and nature of extremely red galaxies (ERO, R-K>5.6) found behind two lensing clusters and compare them with other known galaxy populations. New HST/ACS observations, Spitzer IRAC and MIPS, and Chandra/ACIS observations of the two lensing clusters Abell 1835 and AC114 contemplate our earlier optical and near-IR observations and have been used to study extremely red objects (EROs) in these deep fields. We have found 6 and 9 EROs in Abell 1835 and AC114. Several (7) of these objects are undetected up to the I and/or z band, and are hence ``optical'' drop-out sources. The photometric redshifts of most of our sources (80%) are z~0.7-1.5. According to simple colour-colour diagrams the majority of our objects would be classified as hosting old stellar populations. However, there are clear signs of dusty starbursts for several among them. These objects correspond to the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
