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The Oldest Stellar Populations at z ~ 1.5

1 Pith paper cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.

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abstract

There are at least three reasons for being interested in galaxies at high redshifts that formed most of their stars quite quickly early in the history of the Universe: (1) the ages of their stellar populations can potentially place interesting constraints on cosmological parameters and on the epoch of the earliest major episodes of star formation, (2) their morphologies may provide important clues to the history and mechanisms of spheroid formation, and (3) they are likely to identify the regions of highest overdensity at a given redshift. We describe a systematic search for galaxies at z ~ 1.5 having essentially pure old stellar populations, with little or no recent star formation. Our approach is to apply a "photometric sieve" to the fields of quasars near this redshift, looking for companion objects with the expected spectral-energy distributions. Follow-up observations on two of the fields having candidates discovered by this technique are described.

fields

astro-ph.GA 1

years

2026 1

verdicts

UNVERDICTED 1

representative citing papers

Towards Bayesian Photometric Cosmic Chronometers: Application to VIPERS

astro-ph.GA · 2026-06-05 · unverdicted · novelty 5.0

Bayesian photometric cosmic chronometer analysis on VIPERS PDR2 data yields H(z=0.65)=93.68±28.27(stat)±10.67(syst) km/s/Mpc, consistent with spectroscopic CC results and Planck ΛCDM, as a proof of concept for photometric surveys.

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Showing 1 of 1 citing paper.

  • Towards Bayesian Photometric Cosmic Chronometers: Application to VIPERS astro-ph.GA · 2026-06-05 · unverdicted · none · ref 58 · internal anchor

    Bayesian photometric cosmic chronometer analysis on VIPERS PDR2 data yields H(z=0.65)=93.68±28.27(stat)±10.67(syst) km/s/Mpc, consistent with spectroscopic CC results and Planck ΛCDM, as a proof of concept for photometric surveys.