Photometrically Selected Protocluster Candidates at z~9-10 in the JWST COSMOS-Web field
Cossas K.-W. Wu, Chih-Teng Ling, Tomotsugu Goto, Amos Y.-A. Chen, Tetsuya Hashimoto, Seong Jin Kim, Simon C.-C. Ho, Ece Kilerci, Tiger Yu-Yang Hsiao, Yuri Uno, and Terry Long Phan

TL;DR
This study identifies seven candidate protoclusters at redshifts 9-10 in the JWST COSMOS-Web field using photometric data, providing insights into early galaxy cluster formation and testing cosmological models.
Contribution
First identification of high-redshift protocluster candidates using JWST photometry, with a novel method for overdensity detection based on photometric redshift PDFs.
Findings
Seven protocluster candidates with halo masses around 10^11 solar masses.
Overdensity detection method validated with spectroscopic sample.
Provides critical observational data for early universe structure formation.
Abstract
High-redshift protoclusters are crucial for understanding the formation of galaxy clusters and the evolution of galaxies in dense environments. The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), with its unprecedented near-infrared sensitivity, enables the first exploration of protoclusters beyond 10. Among JWST surveys, COSMOS-Web Data Release 0.5 offers the largest area 0.27 deg, making it an optimal field for protocluster searches. In this study, we searched for protoclusters at 9-10 using 366 F115W dropout galaxies. We evaluated the reliability of our photometric redshift by validation tests with the JADES DR3 spectroscopic sample, obtaining the likelihood of falsely identifying interlopers as . Overdensities () are computed by weighting galaxy positions with their photometric redshift probability density functions (PDF), using a 2.5 cMpc aperture and a…
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