A z=1.82 Analog of Local Ultra-massive Elliptical Galaxies
M. Onodera, E. Daddi, R. Gobat, M. Cappellari, N. Arimoto, A. Renzini,, Y. Yamada, H. J. McCracken, C. Mancini, P. Capak, M. Carollo, A. Cimatti, M., Giavalisco, O. Ilbert, X. Kong, S. Lilly, K. Motohara, K. Ohta, D. B., Sanders, N. Scoville, N. Tamura, and Y. Taniguchi

TL;DR
This study presents detailed observations of a massive, passive galaxy at z=1.82, showing it has properties similar to local giant ellipticals, challenging previous notions of their evolution and diversity.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed spectroscopic and morphological analysis of a z=1.82 galaxy that closely resembles local ellipticals, suggesting diverse evolutionary paths for high-z massive galaxies.
Findings
Galaxy has size and velocity dispersion similar to local ellipticals.
Stellar population indicates formation redshift z~2.5-4.
Mass estimates are consistent across multiple methods.
Abstract
We present observations of a very massive galaxy at z=1.82 which show that its morphology, size, velocity dispersion and stellar population properties that are fully consistent with those expected for passively evolving progenitors of today's giant ellipticals. These findings are based on a deep optical rest-frame spectrum obtained with the Multi-Object InfraRed Camera and Spectrograph (MOIRCS) on the Subaru telescope of a high-z passive galaxy candidate (pBzK) from the COSMOS field, for which we accurately measure its redshift of z=1.8230 and obtain an upper limit on its velocity dispersion sigma_star<326 km/s. By detailed stellar population modeling of both the galaxy broad-band SED and the rest-frame optical spectrum we derive a star-formation-weighted age and formation redshift of t_sf~1-2 Gyr and z_form~2.5-4, and a stellar mass of M_star~(3-4)x10^{11} M_sun. This is in agreement…
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