74 research outputs found

    Beneath the Baselines: Detecting Molecular Emission from Submillimeter Galaxies with the GBT

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    We report the first detection of a submillimeter galaxy (SMG) in CO(1 →0) emission using the GBT. We identify a line with Δv_(FWHM) ~1000 kms^(−1) in the 1 cm spectrum of SMM J13120+4242 at z = 3.408, which is significantly greater than the width of the previously detected CO(4→3) line. If the observed CO(1→0) line profile arises from a single object and not several merging objects, the CO(4 →3)/CO(1→0) brightness temperature ratio of ~0.26 suggests n(H_2) > 10^3 cm^(−3) and the presence of sub-thermally excited gas. The 10σ integrated line flux implies a cold molecular gas mass M(H2) ~10^(11)M_⊙, comparable to the dynamical mass estimate and four times larger than the H_2 mass found from the CO(4 →3) line. While our observations confirm that this SMG is massive and highly gas-rich, they also suggest that J_(upper) > 3 transitions of CO may not accurately trace cold, diffuse molecular gas in SMGs

    UV/Optical Spectroscopy of Submillimeter Galaxies

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    We summarize the astrophysical properties of the submillimeter galaxy population gleaned from our optical and near-IR spectroscopic surveys of radio-identified SCUBA galaxies. Precise redshift information allows basic evolutionary properties to be measured, but also facilitates a large range of ancilliary science, including clustering and comparisons with the inter-galactic medium, and detection of CO molecular gas. We demonstrate that the rest-frame UV offers rich astrophysical diagnostics both from individual spectra (AGN characterization and wind outflows) and from stacked spectra of SMGs in different classes (UV-bright and faint starbursts, and type 2 AGN)

    A 1200-μm MAMBO survey of the GOODS-N field: a significant population of submillimetre dropout galaxies

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    We present a 1200-mu m image of the Great Observatories Origin Deep Survey North (GOODS-N) field, obtained with the Max Planck Millimetre Bolometer array (MAMBO) on the IRAM 30-m telescope. The survey covers a contiguous area of 287 arcmin(^2) to a near-uniform noise level of similar to 0.7mJy beam(^-1). After Bayesian flux deboosting, a total of 30 sources are recovered (>= 3.5 sigma). An optimal combination of our 1200-mu m data and an existing 850-mu m image from the Submillimetre Common-User Bolometer Array (SCUBA) yielded 33 sources (>= 4 sigma). We combine our GOODS-N sample with those obtained in the Lockman Hole and ELAIS N2 fields (Scott et al. 2002; Greve et al. 2004) in order to explore the degree of overlap between 1200-and 850-mu m-selected galaxies (hereafter SMGs), finding no significant difference between their S-850 mu m/S-1200 mu m distributions. However, a noise-weighted stacking analysis yields a significant detection of the 1200-mu m-blank SCUBA sources, S-850 mu m/S-1200 mu m = 3.8 +/- 0.4, whereas no significant 850-mu m signal is found for the 850-mu m-blank MAMBO sources (S-850 mu m/S-1200 mu m = 0.7 +/- 0.3). The hypothesis that the S-850 mu m/S-1200 mu m distribution of SCUBA sources is also representative of the MAMBO population is rejected at the similar to 4 sigma level, via Monte Carlo simulations. Therefore, although the populations overlap, galaxies selected at 850 and 1200 mu m are different, and there is compelling evidence for a significant 1200-mu m-detected population which is not recovered at 850 mu m. These are submillimetre dropouts (SDOs), with S-850 mu m/S-1200 mu m = 0.7-1.7, requiring very cold dust or unusual spectral energy distributions (T-d similar or equal to 10 K; beta similar or equal to 1), unless SDOs reside beyond the redshift range observed for radio-identified SMGs, i. e. at z > 4

    An excess of star-forming galaxies in the fields of high-redshift QSOs

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    We present submillimetre (submm) and mid-infrared (MIR) imaging observations of five fields centred on quasi-stellar objects (QSOs) at 1.7 <z< 2.8. All five QSOs were detected previously at submm wavelengths. At 850 (450) μm, we detect 17 (11) submillimetre galaxies (SMGs) in addition to the QSOs. The total area mapped at 850 μm is ∼28 arcmin2 down to rms noise levels of 1–2 mJy beam−1, depending on the field. Integral number counts are computed from the 850-μm data using the same analytical techniques adopted by ‘blank-field’ submm surveys. We find that the ‘QSO-field’ counts show a clear excess over the blank-field counts at deboosted flux densities of ∼2–4 mJy; at higher flux densities, the counts are consistent with the blank-field counts. Robust MIR counterparts are identified for all four submm detected QSOs and ∼60 per cent of the SMGs. The MIR colours of the QSOs are similar to those of the local ultraluminous infrared galaxy (ULIRG)/active galactic nuclei (AGN) Mrk 231 if placed at 1 <z< 3 whilst most of the SMGs have colours very similar to those of the local ULIRG Arp 220 at 1 <z< 3. MIR diagnostics therefore find no strong evidence that the SMGs host buried AGN although we cannot rule out such a possibility. Taken together our results suggest that the QSOs sit in regions of the early universe which are undergoing an enhanced level of major star formation activity, and should evolve to become similarly dense regions containing massive galaxies at the present epoch. Finally, we find evidence that the level of star formation activity in individual galaxies appears to be lower around the QSOs than it is around more powerful radio-loud AGN at higher redshifts.We thank Ian Smail for extensive comments on the draft manuscript and Mark Thompson for useful discussions. The JCMT is operated by The Joint Astronomy Centre on behalf of the Science and Technology Facilities Council of the United Kingdom, the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research and the National Research Council of Canada. JCMT data were taken under project IDs M03AU46, M03BU32 and M04BU14. This work is based (in part) on observations made with the Spitzer Space Telescope, which is operated by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology under a contract with NASA. Support for this work was provided by NASA through an award issued by JPL/Caltech. JAS, MJP and FJC acknowledge support from the Royal Society. FJC acknowledges further support from the Spanish Ministerio de Educación y Ciencia under project ESP2006-13608

    Mid-IR Spectroscopy of High-z SMGs: First Results

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    We present mid-infrared spectra of 5 submmillimeter galaxies at redshifts z = 0.65 − 2.38 taken with the Infrared Spectrograph aboard the Spitzer Space Telescope. Four of these sources have strong PAH features and the strength of these features are consistent with these galaxies being dominated by star formation. The other source displays a Mrk 231-type broad emission feature at restframe ~8 μm that does not conform to the typical 7.7/8.6 μm PAH complex in starburst galaxies, suggesting a more substantial AGN contribution

    Gas and Dust in the Extremely Red Object ERO J164502+4626.4

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    We report the first detection of the lowest CO transition in a sub-millimetre bright galaxy and extremely red object (ERO) at z = 1.44 using the Very Large Array. The total J = 1 - 0 line luminosity of ERO J164502+4626.4 is (7+-1) x 10^{10} K km s^{-1} pc^2, which yields a total molecular gas mass of ~6 x 10^{10} Msun. We also present a map of the 850-um continuum emission obtained using SCUBA, from which we infer a far-IR luminosity and dust mass of L_FIR ~ 9 x 10^{12} Lsun and M_d ~ 9 x 10^{8} Msun. We find tentative evidence that the CO and sub-mm dust emission is extended over several tens of kpc. If confirmed by high-resolution imaging, this implies that ERO J164502+4626.4 is not simply a high redshift counterpart of a typical Ultra Luminous Infrared Galaxy (ULIRG).Comment: 21 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
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