A multiwavelength study of near- and mid-infrared selected galaxies at high redshift: ERGs, AGN-identification and the contribution from dust
Hugo Messias

TL;DR
This thesis uses multi-wavelength IR data to analyze high-redshift galaxy populations, develop improved AGN selection criteria, and study dust evolution, revealing their interconnected roles in galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It introduces new IR criteria for AGN identification and provides comprehensive analysis of galaxy populations and dust contribution at high redshift.
Findings
EROs, IEROs, and DRGs are part of the same galaxy evolution sequence.
New IR criteria effectively identify AGN up to z=7.
Dust luminosity density declines steeply since z=1-2.
Abstract
The main focus of this thesis is the IR spectral regime, which since the 70's and 80's has revolutionised our understanding of the Universe. A multi-wavelength analysis on Extremely Red Galaxy populations is first presented in one of the most intensively observed patch of the sky, the Chandra Deep Field South. By adopting a purely statistical methodology, we consider all the photometric and spectroscopic information available on large samples of Extremely Red Objects (EROs, 553 sources), IRAC EROs (IEROs, 259 sources), and Distant Red Galaxies (DRGs, 289 sources). We derive general properties: redshift distributions, AGN host fraction, star-formation rate densities, dust content, morphology, mass functions and mass densities. The results point to the fact that EROs, IEROs, and DRGs all belong to the same population, yet seen at different phases of galaxy evolution. The second part of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
