Stellar population properties of individual massive early-type galaxies at 1.4 < z < 2
I. Lonoce, C. Maraston, D. Thomas, M. Longhetti, T. Parikh, P., Guarnieri, J. Comparat

TL;DR
This study analyzes spectra of four massive early-type galaxies at redshifts 1.4 to 2, using multiple techniques to determine their stellar ages and metallicities, highlighting the importance of UV indices and detecting the UV-upturn at high redshift.
Contribution
It demonstrates the effectiveness of UV spectral indices in constraining stellar population properties of high-redshift galaxies and reports the highest redshift detection of the UV-upturn phenomenon.
Findings
Galaxy ages range from 0.2 to 4 Gyr.
UV indices improve accuracy of population parameters.
Detection of UV-upturn at z~1.4 in a 4 Gyr old galaxy.
Abstract
We analyse publicly available, individual spectra of four, massive () early-type galaxies with redshifts in the range 1.4 < z < 2 to determine their stellar content, extending our previous work up to z~2. The wide wavelength range of the VLT/X-Shooter spectroscopic data in the UV-Optical-NIR arms along with the availability of spectro-photometry allows us to explore different techniques to obtain the stellar population properties, namely through age/metallicity sensitive spectral indices, full spectral fitting and broad-band photometric fitting. Moreover, together with the widely used optical Lick indices we consider further indices in the UV rest-frame, and demonstrate that UV indices significantly help the accuracy of the resulting population parameters. We find galaxy ages ranging from 0.2 to 4 Gyr, where the oldest galaxy is found at the lowest redshift, with…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
