The Astrophysical Journal (Jan 2023)

COSMOS2020: Identification of High-z Protocluster Candidates in COSMOS

  • Malte Brinch,
  • Thomas R. Greve,
  • John R. Weaver,
  • Gabriel Brammer,
  • Olivier Ilbert,
  • Marko Shuntov,
  • Shuowen Jin,
  • Daizhong Liu,
  • Clara Giménez-Arteaga,
  • Caitlin M. Casey,
  • Iary Davidson,
  • Seiji Fujimoto,
  • Anton M. Koekemoer,
  • Vasily Kokorev,
  • Georgios Magdis,
  • H. J. McCracken,
  • Conor J. R. McPartland,
  • Bahram Mobasher,
  • David B. Sanders,
  • Sune Toft,
  • Francesco Valentino,
  • Giovanni Zamorani,
  • Jorge Zavala,
  • The COSMOS Team

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ac9d96
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 943, no. 2
p. 153

Abstract

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We conduct a systematic search for protocluster candidates at z ≥ 6 in the Cosmic Evolution Survey (COSMOS) field using the recently released COSMOS2020 source catalog. We select galaxies using a number of selection criteria to obtain a sample of galaxies that have a high probability of being inside a given redshift bin. We then apply overdensity analysis to the bins using two density estimators, a Weighted Adaptive Kernel estimator and a Weighted Voronoi Tessellation estimator. We have found 15 significant (>4 σ ) candidate galaxy overdensities across the redshift range 6 ≤ z ≤ 7.7. The majority of the galaxies appear to be on the galaxy main sequence at their respective epochs. We use multiple stellar-mass-to-halo-mass conversion methods to obtain a range of dark matter halo mass estimates for the overdensities in the range of ∼10 ^11 –10 ^13 M _⊙ , at the respective redshifts of the overdensities. The number and the masses of the halos associated with our protocluster candidates are consistent with what is expected from the area of a COSMOS-like survey in a standard Λ cold dark matter cosmology. Through comparison with simulation, we expect that all of the overdensities at z ≃ 6 will evolve into Virgo-/Coma-like clusters at present (i.e., with masses ∼10 ^14 –10 ^15 M _⊙ ). Compared to other overdensities identified at z ≥ 6 via narrowband selection techniques, the overdensities presented appear to have ∼10× higher stellar masses and star formation rates (SFRs). We compare the evolution in the total SFR and stellar mass content of the protocluster candidates across the redshift range 6 ≤ z ≤ 7.7 and find agreement with the total average SFR from simulations.

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