Disappearing galaxies: the orientation dependence of JWST-bright, HST-dark, star-forming galaxy selection
R. K. Cochrane, D. Angl\'es-Alc\'azar, F. Cullen, and C. C. Hayward

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution simulations to explore the orientation dependence of JWST-bright, HST-dark, star-forming galaxies, revealing that their visibility depends heavily on the line of sight and dust distribution.
Contribution
First simulation-based analysis of HST-dark galaxies, showing their dependence on viewing angle and dust, with implications for observational and theoretical galaxy studies.
Findings
HST-dark galaxies are high-redshift, dust-rich, and compact.
Orientation significantly affects galaxy detectability in optical/NIR.
HST-dark sources are not exotic but a natural subset of dusty, high-z galaxies.
Abstract
Galaxies that are invisible in deep optical-NIR imaging but detected at longer wavelengths have been the focus of several recent observational studies, with speculation that they could constitute a substantial missing population and even dominate the cosmic star formation rate density at . The depths now achievable with JWST at the longest wavelengths probed by HST, coupled with the transformative resolution at longer wavelengths, are already enabling detailed, spatially-resolved characterisation of sources that were invisible to HST, often known as `HST-dark' galaxies. However, until now, there has been little theoretical work to compare against. We present the first simulation-based study of this population, using highly-resolved galaxies from the Feedback in Realistic Environments (FIRE) project, with multi-wavelength images along several lines of sight forward-modelled…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Optical Sensing Technologies · Advanced Fluorescence Microscopy Techniques · Adaptive optics and wavefront sensing
