Optical and near-infrared observations of the SPT2349-56 proto-cluster core at z = 4.3
K. M. Rotermund, S. C. Chapman, K. A. Phadke, R. Hill, E. Pass, M., Aravena, M. L. N. Ashby, A. Babul, M. B\'ethermin, R. Canning, C. de Breuck,, C. Dong, A. H. Gonzalez, C. C. Hayward, S. Jarugula, D. P. Marrone, D., Narayanan, C. Reuter, D. Scott, J. S. Spilker, J. D. Vieira

TL;DR
This study presents optical and near-infrared observations of the SPT2349-56 proto-cluster at z=4.3, revealing its stellar mass, galaxy composition, and the difficulty of detecting such structures in optical surveys, highlighting a dust-obscured phase of cluster formation.
Contribution
First detailed optical/IR characterization of the high-redshift proto-cluster core, revealing its stellar mass, galaxy types, and obscured nature, advancing understanding of early cluster formation.
Findings
Detected 9 of 14 SMGs with optical/IR counterparts
Identified a candidate BCG with stellar mass ~3.2x10^11 M_sun
Proto-cluster core has a stellar mass comparable to z=1 BCGs
Abstract
We present Gemini-S and {\it Spitzer}-IRAC optical-through-near-IR observations in the field of the SPT2349-56 proto-cluster at . We detect optical/IR counterparts for only nine of the 14 submillimetre galaxies (SMGs) previously identified by ALMA in the core of SPT2349-56. In addition, we detect four Lyman-break galaxies (LBGs) in the 30 arcsec diameter region surrounding this proto-cluster core. Three of the four LBGs are new systems, while one appears to be a counterpart of one of the nine observed SMGs. We identify a candidate brightest cluster galaxy (BCG) with a stellar mass of . The stellar masses of the eight other SMGs place them on, above, and below the main sequence of star formation at . The cumulative stellar mass for the SPT2349-56 core is at least ,…
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.
Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
