Spitzer Observations of Massive Red Galaxies at High Redshift
Casey Papovich (1,2), L. A. Moustakas (3), M. Dickinson (4), E. Le, Floc'h (1,5), G. H. Rieke (1), E. Daddi (2,4), D. M. Alexander (6), F. Bauer, (7), W. N. Brandt (8), T. Dahlen (9,10), E. Egami (1), P. Eisenhardt (3), D., Elbaz (11), H. C. Ferguson (9), M. Giavalisco (9)

TL;DR
This study uses multi-wavelength observations to analyze the properties and star formation activity of massive red galaxies at high redshift, revealing that most star formation in these galaxies occurred before z~1.5.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of massive red galaxies at z=1-3.5 using Spitzer and other observations, highlighting their star formation rates and evolutionary status.
Findings
Massive red galaxies at z=1.5-3 have high specific SFRs.
Most high-redshift massive galaxies show signs of ongoing star formation.
Star formation in massive galaxies is largely complete by z~1.5.
Abstract
We investigate the properties of massive galaxies at z=1-3.5 using HST observations, ground-based near-IR imaging, and Spitzer Space Telescope observations at 3-24 micron. We identify 153 distant red galaxies (DRGs) with J-K > 2.3 mag (Vega) in the southern GOODS field. This sample is approximately complete in stellar mass for passively evolving galaxies above 10^11 solar masses and z < 3. The galaxies identified by this selection are roughly split between objects whose optical and near-IR rest-frame light is dominated by evolved stars combined with ongoing star formation, and galaxies whose light is dominated by heavily reddened starbursts. Very few of the galaxies (< 10%) have no indication of current star formation. Using SFR estimates that include the reradiated IR emission, the DRGs at z=1.5-3 with stellar masses > 10^11 solar masses have specific SFRs (SFRs per unit stellar mass)…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Radio Astronomy Observations and Technology
