Galaxy population properties of the massive X-ray luminous galaxy cluster XDCP J0044.0-2033 at z=1.58: red-sequence formation, massive galaxy assembly, and central star formation activity
R. Fassbender, A. Nastasi, J.S. Santos, C. Lidman, M. Verdugo, Y., Koyama, P. Rosati, D. Pierini, N. Padilla, A.D. Romeo, N. Menci, A., Bongiorno, M. Castellano, P. Cerulo, A. Fontana, A. Galametz, A. Grazian, A., Lamastra, L. Pentericci, V. Sommariva, V. Strazzullo, R. Suhada

TL;DR
This study examines the galaxy populations of a massive, high-redshift galaxy cluster, revealing active galaxy assembly, a developing red sequence, and ongoing star formation, highlighting the effects of dense environments on galaxy evolution at z=1.58.
Contribution
It provides detailed observational evidence of galaxy assembly and red-sequence formation in a massive cluster at z=1.58, emphasizing merging processes and environmental effects.
Findings
Massive cluster has a centrally peaked galaxy density profile.
Most massive galaxies are actively merging and assembling mass.
Red sequence is not fully established; blue star-forming galaxies are present.
Abstract
We investigate various galaxy population properties of the massive X-ray luminous galaxy cluster XDCP J0044.0-2033 at z=1.58, which constitutes the most extreme matter density peak at this redshift currently known. We analyze deep VLT/HAWK-I NIR data in the J- and Ks-bands, complemented by Subaru imaging in i and V, Spitzer observations at 4.5 micron, and new spectroscopic observations with VLT/FORS2. We detect a cluster-associated excess population of about 90 galaxies, which follows a centrally peaked, compact NFW galaxy surface density profile with a concentration of c200~10. Based on the Spitzer 4.5 micron imaging data, we measure a stellar mass fraction of fstar,500=(3.3+-1.4)% consistent with local values. The total J- and Ks-band galaxy luminosity functions of the core region yield characteristic magnitudes J* and Ks* consistent with expectations from simple z_f=3 burst models.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
