739 research outputs found
A CO emission line from the optical and near-IR undetected submillimeter galaxy GN10
We report the detection of a CO emission line from the submillimiter galaxy
(SMG) GN10 in the GOODS-N field. GN10 lacks any counterpart in extremely deep
optical and near-IR imaging obtained with the Hubble Space Telescope and
ground-based facilities. This is a prototypical case of a source that is
extremely obscured by dust, for which it is practically impossible to derive a
spectroscopic redshift in the optical/near-IR. Under the hypothesis that GN10
is part of a proto-cluster structure previously identified at z~4.05 in the
same field, we searched for CO[4-3] at 91.4 GHz with the IRAM Plateau de Bure
Interferometer, and successfully detected a line. We find that the most likely
redshift identification is z=4.0424+-0.0013, based on: 1) the very low chance
that the CO line is actually serendipitous from a different redshift; 2) a
radio-IR photometric redshift analysis; 3) the identical radio-IR SED, within a
scaling factor, of two other SMGs at the same redshift. The faintness at
optical/near-IR wavelengths requires an attenuation of A_V~5-7.5 mag. This
result supports the case that a substantial population of very high-z SMGs
exists that had been missed by previous spectroscopic surveys. This is the
first time that a CO emission line has been detected for a galaxy that is
invisible in the optical and near-IR. Our work demonstrates the power of
existing and planned facilities for completing the census of star formation and
stellar mass in the distant Universe by measuring redshifts of the most
obscured galaxies through millimeter spectroscopy.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures. ApJ Letters in pres
EVLA observations of a proto-cluster of molecular gas rich galaxies at z = 4.05
We present observations of the molecular gas in the GN20 proto-cluster of
galaxies at using the Expanded Very Large Array (EVLA). This group of
galaxies is the ideal laboratory for studying the formation of massive galaxies
via luminous, gas-rich starbursts within 1.6 Gyr of the Big Bang. We detect
three galaxies in the proto-cluster in CO 2-1 emission, with gas masses (H)
between and M. The emission
from the brightest source, GN20, is resolved with a size , and has a
clear north-south velocity gradient, possibly indicating ordered rotation. The
gas mass in GN20 is comparable to the stellar mass ( M and M, respectively), and
the sum of gas plus stellar mass is comparable to the dynamical mass of the
system ( M), within a
5kpc radius. There is also evidence for a tidal tail extending another
north of the galaxy with a narrow velocity dispersion. GN20 may be a massive,
gas rich disk that is gravitationally disturbed, but not completely disrupted.
There is one Lyman-break galaxy (BD29079) in the GN20 proto-cluster with an
optical spectroscopic redshift within our search volume, and we set a 3
limit to the molecular gas mass of this galaxy of M.Comment: AAStex format, 4 figures; prepared for the ApJ Letters EVLA special
issu
CO(1-0) line imaging of massive star-forming disc galaxies at z=1.5-2.2
We present detections of the CO(J= 1-0) emission line in a sample of four massive star-forming galaxies at z~1.5-2.2 obtained with the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array (VLA). Combining these observations with previous CO(2-1) and CO(3-2) detections of these galaxies, we study the excitation properties of the molecular gas in our sample sources. We find an average line brightness temperature ratios of R_{21}=0.70+\-0.16 and R_{31}=0.50+\-0.29, based on measurements for three and two galaxies, respectively. These results provide additional support to previous indications of sub-thermal gas excitation for the CO(3-2) line with a typically assumed line ratio R_{31}~0.5. For one of our targets, BzK-21000, we present spatially resolved CO line maps. At the resolution of 0.18'' (1.5 kpc), most of the emission is resolved out except for some clumpy structure. From this, we attempt to identify molecular gas clumps in the data cube, finding 4 possible candidates. We estimate that <40 % of the molecular gas is confined to giant clumps (~1.5 kpc in size), and thus most of the gas could be distributed in small fainter clouds or in fairly diffuse extended regions of lower brightness temperatures than our sensitivity limit
First redshift determination of an optically/UV faint submillimeter galaxy using CO emission lines
We report the redshift of a distant, highly obscured submm galaxy (SMG),
based entirely on the detection of its CO line emission. We have used the newly
commissioned Eight-MIxer Receiver (EMIR) at the IRAM 30m telescope, with its 8
GHz of instantaneous dual-polarization bandwidth, to search the 3-mm
atmospheric window for CO emission from SMMJ14009+0252, a bright SMG detected
in the SCUBA Lens Survey. A detection of the CO(3--2) line in the 3-mm window
was confirmed via observations of CO(5--4) in the 2-mm window. Both lines
constrain the redshift of SMMJ14009+0252 to z=2.9344, with high precision (dz=2
10^{-4}). Such observations will become routine in determining redshifts in the
era of the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA).Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, accepted by ApJ
Expanded Very Large Arrays Observations of a Proto-Cluster of Molecular Gas-Rich Galaxies at z = 4.05
We present observations of the molecular gas in the GN20 proto-cluster of galaxies at z = 4.05 using the Expanded Very Large Array (EVLA). This group of galaxies is the ideal laboratory for studying the formation of massive galaxies via luminous, gas-rich starbursts within 1.6 Gyr of the big bang. We detect three galaxies in the proto-cluster in CO 2-1 emission, with gas masses (H_2) between 10^(10) and 10^(11) × (α/0.8) M_⊙. The emission from the brightest source, GN20, is resolved with a size ~2'' and has a clear north-south velocity gradient, possibly indicating ordered rotation. The gas mass in GN20 is comparable to the stellar mass (1.3 × 10^(11) × (α/0.8) M_⊙ and 2.3 × 10^(11) M_⊙, respectively), and the sum of gas plus stellar mass is comparable to the dynamical mass of the system (~3.4 × 10^(11)[sin (i)/sin (45°)]^(–2) M_⊙), within a 5 kpc radius. There is also evidence for a tidal tail extending another 2'' north of the galaxy with a narrow velocity dispersion. GN20 may be a massive, gas-rich disk that is gravitationally disturbed, but not completely disrupted. There is one Lyman-break galaxy (BD29079) in the GN20 proto-cluster with an optical spectroscopic redshift within our search volume, and we set a 3σ limit to the molecular gas mass of this galaxy of 1.1 × 10^(10) × (α/0.8) M_⊙
The Dust and Molecular Gas in the Brightest Cluster Galaxy in MACS 1931.8-2635
We present new ALMA observations of the molecular gas and far-infrared
continuum around the brightest cluster galaxy (BCG) in the cool-core cluster
MACS 1931.8-2635. Our observations reveal
M of molecular gas, on par with the largest known reservoirs of cold
gas in a cluster core. We detect CO(1-0), CO(3-2), and CO(4-3) emission from
both diffuse and compact molecular gas components that extend from the BCG
center out to kpc to the northwest, tracing the UV knots and H
filaments observed by HST. Due to the lack of morphological symmetry, we
hypothesize that the km s velocity of the CO in the tail is
not due to concurrent uplift by AGN jets, rather we may be observing the
aftermath of a recent AGN outburst. The CO spectral line energy distribution
suggests that molecular gas excitation is influenced by processes related to
both star formation and recent AGN feedback. Continuum emission in Bands 6 and
7 arises from dust and is spatially coincident with young stars and nebular
emission observed in the UV and optical. We constrain the temperature of
several dust clumps to be K, which is too cold to be directly
interacting with the surrounding keV intracluster medium (ICM). The
cold dust population extends beyond the observed CO emission and must either be
protected from interacting with the ICM or be surrounded by local volumes of
ICM that are several keV colder than observed by Chandra.Comment: Accepted for Publication in ApJ, 19 pages, 11 figures. Minor
revisions to the discussion and accompanying figur
Precise Identifications of Submillimeter Galaxies: Measuring the History of Massive Star-Forming Galaxies to z>5
We carried out extremely sensitive Submillimeter Array (SMA) 340 GHz (860
micron) continuum imaging of a complete sample of SCUBA 850 micron sources (>4
sigma) with fluxes >3 mJy in the GOODS-N. Using these data and new SCUBA-2
data, we do not detect 4 of the 16 SCUBA sources, and we rule out the original
SCUBA fluxes at the 4 sigma level. Three more resolve into multiple fainter SMA
galaxies, suggesting that our understanding of the most luminous high-redshift
dusty galaxies may not be as reliable as we thought. 10 of the 16 independent
SMA sources have spectroscopic redshifts (optical/infrared or CO) to z=5.18.
Using a new, ultradeep 20 cm image obtained with the Karl G. Jansky Very Large
Array (rms of 2.5 microJy), we find that all 16 of the SMA sources are detected
at >5 sigma. Using Herschel far-infrared (FIR) data, we show that the five
isolated SMA sources with Herschel detections are well described by an Arp 220
spectral energy distribution template in the FIR. They also closely obey the
local FIR-radio correlation, a result that does not suffer from a radio bias.
We compute the contribution from the 16 SMA sources to the universal star
formation rate (SFR) per comoving volume. With individual SFRs in the range
700-5000 solar masses per year, they contribute ~30% of the
extinction-corrected ultraviolet-selected SFR density from z=1 to at least z=5.
Star formation histories determined from extinction-corrected ultraviolet
populations and from submillimeter galaxy populations only partially overlap,
due to the extreme ultraviolet faintness of some submillimeter galaxies.Comment: 26 pages, minor changes to match published versio
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