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High resolution science with high redshift galaxies
Authors:RA Windhorst  NP Hathi  SH Cohen  RA Jansen  D Kawata  SP Driver  B Gibson
Institution:aSchool of Earth & Space Exploration, Arizona State University, Box 871404, Tempe, AZ 85287-1404, USA;bCarnegie Observatories, 813 Santa Barbara Street, Pasadena, CA 91101, USA;cSchool of Physics and Astronomy, St. Andrews, Fife KY16 9SS, Scotland, United Kingdom;dUniversity of Central Lancashire, Preston, Lancashire PR1 2HE, United Kingdom
Abstract:We summarize the high-resolution science that has been done on high redshift galaxies with Adaptive Optics (AO) on the world’s largest ground-based facilities and with the Hubble Space Telescope (HST). These facilities complement each other. Ground-based AO provides better light gathering power and in principle better resolution than HST, giving it the edge in high spatial resolution imaging and high resolution spectroscopy. HST produces higher quality, more stable PSF’s over larger field-of-views in a much darker sky-background than ground-based AO, and yields deeper wide-field images and low-resolution spectra than the ground. Faint galaxies have steadily decreasing sizes at fainter fluxes and higher redshifts, reflecting the hierarchical formation of galaxies over cosmic time. HST has imaged this process in great structural detail to z less, approximate 6, and ground-based AO and spectroscopy has provided measurements of their masses and other physical properties with cosmic time. Last, we review how the 6.5 m James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) will measure First Light, reionization, and galaxy assembly in the near–mid-IR after 2013.
Keywords:High resolution imaging  Distant galaxies  Galaxy assembly  Reionization  First Light  James Webb Space Telescope
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