Seminar
    Reconstructing the formation 
Resumen
One of the most widely researched topics in Extragalactic Astrophysics 
in the last decades is how early-type galaxies have formed their stars 
and assembled. In this context, we now have unequivocal observational 
evidences about the existence of a numerous population of massive 
galaxies which not only had assembled a considerable amount of stars 
(~1011 M_sun) by z~2, but were already evolving passively by that 
time. These galaxies, the likely progenitors of nearby ellipticals, 
are also quite compact in comparison with local galaxies of the same 
mass. These result are mainly based on measurements designed to obtain 
stellar masses and sizes, and our estimations of these parameters are 
now quite robust. Now we need a more secure determination of how 
exactly they formed and assembled their stellar mass in just 2-3 Gyr 
(z>2). In other words, how was their Star Formation History and which 
are the properties (age, metallicity, dust content) of their stellar 
populations? And how could they end up with such high masses and small 
sizes? In this talk, we will present our results about the SFH (mainly 
ages and duty cycles) of massive galaxies at z=1-3 based on the 
deepest spectro-photometric data ever taken. These data were gathered 
by the Survey for High-z Absorption Red and Dead Sources (SHARDS), a 
ESO/GTC Large Program aimed at obtaining R~50 optical spectra of 
distant galaxies. This resolution is especially suited to measure 
absorption indices such as D(4000), Mg_UV, the Balmer break,etc.. for 
galaxies up to z~3 (merging our SHARDS data with HST/WFC3 grism 
observations) or emission-line fluxes for faint targets up to 
z~6. These measurements represent a big step forward for the robust 
determination of the stellar population properties, providing a much 
more certain characterization of the stellar content of distant 
galaxies than the typical broad-band studies. Our results uniquely 
allow to study the stellar content of red and dead galaxies at z~2 and 
identify progenitors at higher redshifts, as well as helping to 
constrain the models of galaxy formation.
Sobre la charla
Universidad Complutense de Madrid
 
       
    
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