Proto-groups at 1.8<z<3 in the zCOSMOS-deep sample
C. Diener, S. J. Lilly, C. Knobel, G. Zamorani, G. Lemson, P., Kampczyk, N. Scoville, C. M. Carollo, T. Contini, J.-P. Kneib, O. Le Fevre,, V. Mainieri, A. Renzini, M. Scodeggio, S. Bardelli, M. Bolzonella, A., Bongiorno, K. Caputi, O. Cucciati, S. de la Torre, L. de Ravel

TL;DR
This study identifies 42 proto-group candidates at 1.8<z<3 in the zCOSMOS-deep survey, analyzing their evolution into present-day haloes and their galaxy properties, providing insights into early group assembly.
Contribution
First identification and analysis of proto-groups at high redshift using spectroscopic data and mock catalogues, linking them to present-day haloes.
Findings
50% of systems will merge into the same halo by today
93% of candidate groups will have some members in the same halo now
Sample represents a large fraction of present-day massive haloes
Abstract
We identify 42 candidate groups lying between 1.8<z<3.0 from a sample of 3502 galaxies with spectroscopic redshifts in the zCOSMOS-deep redshift survey within the same redshift interval. These systems contain three to five spectroscopic galaxies that lie within 500kpc in projected distance (in physical space) and within 700km/s in velocity. Based on extensive analysis of mock catalogues that have been generated from the Millennium simulation, we examine the likely nature of these systems at the time of observation, and what they will evolve into down to the present epoch. Although few of the "member" galaxies are likely to reside in the same halo at the epoch we observe them, 50% of the systems will eventually bring them all into the same halo, and almost all (93%) will have at least part of the member galaxies in the same halo by the present epoch. Most of the candidate groups can…
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