The NEWFIRM HETDEX Survey: Photometric Catalog and a Conservative Sample of Massive Quiescent Galaxies at z=3-5 over 17.5 deg^2 in the SHELA Field
Matthew L. Stevans (UT Austin), Steven L. Finkelstein (UT Austin),, Lalitwadee Kawinwanichakij (Kavli IPMU), Isak Wold (NASA GSFC), Casey, Papovich (Texas A&M), Rachel S. Somerville (CCA), L. Y. Aaron Yung (NASA, GSFC), Sydney Sherman (UT Austin), Robin Ciardullo (Penn State)

TL;DR
This paper presents a deep, wide-area near-infrared survey in the SHELA field, identifying a rare sample of massive quiescent galaxies at redshifts 3-5, and discusses implications for galaxy formation models.
Contribution
It provides a new extensive K_s-band catalog with multi-wavelength data, enabling the study of massive high-redshift galaxies and identifying a conservative sample of ultra-massive quiescent candidates.
Findings
Identified nine candidate massive quiescent galaxies at z=3-5.
Detected five ultra-massive galaxies with M* > 10^12 M_sun.
Discussed the rarity and formation challenges of such galaxies in early universe models.
Abstract
We present the results of a deep K_s-band (2.1 um) imaging survey of the Spitzer/HETDEX Exploratory Large Area (SHELA) field using the NEWFIRM near-infrared (NIR) camera on the KPNO Mayall 4-m telescope. This NEWFIRM HETDEX Survey (NHS) reaches a 5-sigma depth of 22.4 AB mag (2"-diameter apertures corrected to total), is ~50% and 90% complete at K~22.65 and K~22.15, respectively, and covers 22 deg^2 of the 24 deg^2 SHELA Spitzer/ IRAC footprint (within ``Stripe 82' of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey). We present a K_s-band-selected catalog which includes deep ugriz imaging from the Dark Energy Camera and 3.6 and 4.5 um imaging from Spitzer/IRAC, with forced-photometry of 1.7 million sources across 17.5 deg^2. The large area and moderate depth of this catalog enables the study of the most massive galaxies at high redshift, and minimizes uncertainties associated with counting statistics and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Adaptive optics and wavefront sensing
