A z=1.85 galaxy group in CEERS: evolved, dustless, massive intra-halo light and a brightest group galaxy in the making
Rosemary T. Coogan, Emanuele Daddi, Aur\'elien Le Bail, David Elbaz,, Mark Dickinson, Mauro Giavalisco, Carlos G\'omez-Guijarro, Alexander de la, Vega, Micaela Bagley, Steven L. Finkelstein, Maximilien Franco, Asantha R., Cooray, Peter Behroozi, Laura Bisigello, Caitlin M. Casey

TL;DR
This study uses JWST imaging to analyze a galaxy group at z=1.85, revealing an evolved, dustless intra-halo light and a forming brightest galaxy, providing insights into early group assembly and IHL evolution.
Contribution
First detailed spectral analysis of intra-halo light at high redshift, revealing its properties and challenging existing models of IHL evolution during galaxy group formation.
Findings
Intra-halo light contributes ~10% of stellar mass at z=1.85.
IHL is dust-poor with an evolved stellar population.
The IHL fraction evolution is more self-similar with redshift than models predict.
Abstract
We present CEERS JWST/NIRCam imaging of a massive galaxy group at z=1.85, to explore the early JWST view on massive group formation in the distant Universe. The group contains >16 members (including 6 spectros. confirmations) down to log10(Mstar/Msun)=8.5, including the brightest group galaxy (BGG) in the process of actively assembling at this redshift. The BGG is comprised of multiple merging components extending ~3.6" (30kpc) across the sky. The BGG contributes 69% of the group's total galactic stellar mass, with one of the merging components containing 76% of the total mass of the BGG and a SFR>1810Msun/yr. Most importantly, we detect intra-halo light (IHL) in several HST and JWST/NIRCam bands, allowing us to construct a state-of-the-art rest-frame UV-NIR Spectral Energy Distribution of the IHL for the first time at this high redshift. This allows stellar population characterisation…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Adaptive optics and wavefront sensing
