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Article overview
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Detection of Massive Forming Galaxies at Redshifts Greater than One | Lennox L. Cowie
; Esther M. Hu
; Antoinette Songaila
; | Date: |
8 Oct 1995 | Journal: | Nature 377 (1995) 603-605 | Subject: | astro-ph | Affiliation: | Univ. of Hawaii, IfA | Abstract: | The complex problem of when and how galaxies formed has not until recently been susceptible of direct attack. It has been known for some time that the excessive number of blue galaxies counted at faint magnitudes implies that a considerable fraction of the massive star formation in the universe occurred at z < 3, but, surprisingly, spectroscopic studies of galaxies down to a B magnitude of 24 found little sign of the expected high-z progenitors of current massive galaxies, but rather, in large part, small blue galaxies at modest redshifts z sim 0.3. This unexpected population has diverted attention from the possibility that early massive star-forming galaxies might also be found in the faint blue excess. From KECK spectroscopic observations deep enough to encompass a large population of z > 1 field galaxies, we can now show directly that in fact these forming galaxies are present in substantial numbers at B sim 24, and that the era from redshifts 1 to 2 was clearly a major period of galaxy formation. These z > 1 galaxies have very unusual morphologies as seen in deep HST WFPC2 images. | Source: | arXiv, astro-ph/9510045 | Services: | Forum | Review | PDF | Favorites |
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