Euclid: The first statistical census of dusty and massive objects in the ERO/Perseus field
G. Girardi (1, 2), A. Grazian (2), G. Rodighiero (1, 2), L. Bisigello (2), G. Gandolfi (3, 2), E. Ba\~nados (4), S. Belladitta (4, 5), J. R. Weaver (6), S. Eales (7), C. C. Lovell (8), K. I. Caputi (9, 10), A. Enia (11, 5), A. Bianchetti (1, 2), E. Dalla Bont\`a (2, 12, 3)

TL;DR
This study uses Euclid and Spitzer data to identify and analyze a population of dusty, massive galaxies at high redshift, revealing their significant contribution to early star formation and galaxy evolution.
Contribution
First statistical census of dusty, massive high-redshift galaxies using Euclid data, expanding understanding of obscured star formation in the early universe.
Findings
Identified 42 robust HIEROs in the Perseus field.
Estimated the galaxy stellar mass function at 3.5<z<5.5.
High-mass end consistent with previous studies, indicating a substantial obscured galaxy population.
Abstract
Our comprehension of the history of star formation at relies on rest-frame UV observations, yet this selection misses the most dusty and massive sources, yielding an incomplete census at early times. Infrared facilities such as Spitzer and the James Webb Space Telescope have revealed a hidden population at - with extreme red colours, named HIEROs (HST-to-IRAC extremely red objects), identified by the criterion . Recently, Euclid Early Release Observations (ERO) have made it possible to further study such objects by comparing Euclid data with ancillary Spitzer/IRAC imaging. We investigate a arcmin area in the Perseus field using VIS and NISP photometry, complemented by the four Spitzer channels and ground-based MegaCam bands (, , , , , ). Applying the colour cut yields HIEROs; after removing…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Scientific Research and Discoveries
