The first catalogue of spectroscopically confirmed red nuggets at z~0.7 from the VIPERS survey. Linking high-z red nuggets and local relics
Krzysztof Lisiecki, Katarzyna Ma{\l}ek, Ma{\l}gorzata Siudek,, Agnieszka Pollo, Janusz Krywult, Agata Karska, Junais

TL;DR
This paper presents the largest spectroscopically confirmed catalogue of red nuggets at z~0.7 from the VIPERS survey, providing new insights into their abundance and evolution bridging high-redshift and local populations.
Contribution
It introduces a new, extensive catalogue of 77 spectroscopically confirmed red nuggets at intermediate redshift, using uniform selection criteria and spectroscopic verification.
Findings
Number density of red nuggets increases from z~0.61 to 0.95.
Catalogue size varies significantly with selection criteria.
Red nuggets are more abundant at intermediate redshift than locally.
Abstract
'Red nuggets' are a rare population of passive compact massive galaxies thought to be the first massive galaxies that formed in the Universe. First found at , they are even less abundant at lower redshifts, and it is believed that with time they mostly transformed through mergers into today's giant ellipticals. Those red nuggets which managed to escape this fate can serve as unique laboratories to study the early evolution of massive galaxies. In this paper, we aim to make use of the VIMOS Public Extragalactic Redshift Survey to build the largest up-to-date catalogue of spectroscopically confirmed red nuggets at the intermediate redshift . Starting from a catalogue of nearly 90 000 VIPERS galaxies we select sources with stellar masses and effective radii kpc. Among them, we select red, passive galaxies…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGeophysics and Gravity Measurements · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
