CfA OIR Division Lunch Talks


January 22, 2004, Pratt Conference Room at 12:30 pm


Rest-frame optical properties of high-z galaxies and
the recent discovery of evolved galaxies at z>2

Dr. Ivo Labbe, Leiden Observatory

Until recently, we thought that optical surveys and photometric techniques which select UV-bright star-forming galaxies gave a fair census of the high-redshift universe. But in the past year, deep surveys in the near-infrared are uncovering new populations of galaxies, showing that we are probably missing up to half of the stellar mass at z ~ 3, and also misinterpreted the morphologies of the galaxies. I will present part of my current PhD thesis work aimed at understanding the nature of the substantial population of evolved galaxies at z > 2 that was discovered in the Faint Infrared Extragalactic Survey (FIRES). The failure to produce sufficient numbers of such galaxies is a common feature of current hierarchical scenarios of galaxy formation. Detailed study of their spectral properties and morphology with the largest ground and space-based telescopes is essential for an improved picture of galaxy formation.