127 research outputs found

    No need for extreme stellar masses at z~7: a test-case study for COS-87259

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    Recent controversy regarding the existence of massive (log(M/M)11\log(M_*/M_\odot) \gtrsim 11) galaxies at z>6z>6 is posing a challenge for galaxy formation theories. Hence, it is of critical importance to understand the effects of SED fitting methods on stellar mass estimates of Epoch of Re-ionisation galaxies. In this work, we perform a case study on the AGN-host galaxy candidate COS-87259 with spectroscopic redshift zspec=6.853z_{\rm spec}=6.853, that is claimed to have an extremely high stellar mass of log(M/M)11.2\log(M_*/M_\odot) \sim 11.2. We test a suite of different SED fitting algorithms and stellar population models on our independently measured photometry in 17 broad bands for this source. Between five different code set-ups, the stellar mass estimates for COS-87259 span log(M/M)=10.24\log(M_*/M_\odot) = 10.24--11.00, whilst the reduced χ2\chi^2 values of the fits are all close to unity within Δχν2=0.9\Delta\chi^2_\nu=0.9, so that the quality of the SED fits is basically indistinguishable. Only the Bayesian inference code Prospector using a non-parametric star formation history model yields a stellar mass exceeding log(M/M)=11\log(M_*/M_\odot)=11. As this SED fitting prescription is becoming increasingly popular for James Webb Space Telescope high-redshift science, we stress the absolute importance to test various SED fitting routines particularly on apparently very massive galaxies at such high redshifts. Ultimately, we conclude that the extremely high stellar mass estimate for COS-87259 is not necessary, deriving equally good fits with stellar masses 1\sim 1 dex lower.Comment: Submitted to ApJ

    Templates for Fitting Photometry of Ultra-High-Redshift Galaxies

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    Recent data from the James Webb Space Telescope allow a first glimpse of galaxies at z11z \gtrsim 11. The most successful tool for identifying ultra-high-redshift candidates and inferring their properties is photometric template fitting. However, current methods rely on templates derived from much lower-redshift conditions, including stellar populations older than the age of the Universe at z>12z > 12, a stellar initial mass function which is physically disallowed at z>6z > 6, and weaker emission lines than currently observed at z>7.5z > 7.5. Here, two sets of synthetic templates, optimized for the expected astrophysics of galaxies at 8128 12, are developed and used to fit three galaxies at z>12z > 12 from the SMACS0723 field. Using these improved templates, quantitative estimates are produced of the bias in inferred properties from JWST observations at z>8z>8 due to these effects. The best-fit redshifts are similar to those found with previous template sets, but the inferred stellar masses drop by as much as 1--1.6 dex, so that stellar masses are no longer seemingly inconsistent with Λ\LambdaCDM. The two new template sets are released in formats compatible with EAZY and LePhare.Comment: Additional template files available via githu

    Molecular gas content and high excitation of a massive main-sequence galaxy at z = 3

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    We present new CO (J = 5-4 and 7-6) and [C I] (3P2-3P1 and 3P1-3P0) emission line observations of the star-forming galaxy D49 at the massive end of the main sequence at z = 3. We incorporate previous CO (J = 3-2) and optical-to-millimetre continuum observations to fit its spectral energy distribution. Our results hint at high-J CO luminosities exceeding the expected location on the empirical correlations with the infrared luminosity. [CI] emission fully consistent with the literature trends is found. We do not retrieve any signatures of a bright active galactic nucleus that could boost the J = 5-4, 7-6 lines in either the infrared or X-ray bands, but warm photon-dominated regions, shocks, or turbulence could in principle do so. We suggest that mechanical heating could be a favourable mechanism able to enhance the gas emission at fixed infrared luminosity in D49 and other main-sequence star-forming galaxies at high redshift, but further investigation is necessary to confirm this explanation. We derive molecular gas masses from dust, CO, and [C I] that all agree within the uncertainties. Given its high star formation rate ~500 Mo yr-1 and stellar mass &gt; 1011.5 Mo, the short depletion timescale of &lt; 0.3 Gyr might indicate that D49 is experiencing its last growth spurt and will soon transit to quiescence.</p

    A solar metallicity galaxy at z>z > 7? Detection of the [N II] 122 μ\mum and [O III] 52 μ\mum lines

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    We present the first detection of the [N II] 122 μ\mum and [O III] 52 μ\mum lines for a reionisation-epoch galaxy. Based on these lines and previous [C II] 158 μ\mum and [O III] 88 μ\mum measurements, we estimate an electron density of \lesssim 500 cm3^{-3} and a gas-phase metallicity Z/Z1.1±0.2Z/Z_\odot \sim 1.1 \pm 0.2 for A1689-zD1, a gravitationally-lensed, dusty galaxy at zz = 7.133. Other measurements or indicators of metallicity so far in galaxy ISMs at zz \gtrsim 6 are typically an order of magnitude lower than this. The unusually high metallicity makes A1689-zD1 inconsistent with the fundamental metallicity relation, although there is likely significant dust obscuration of the stellar mass, which may partly resolve the inconsistency. Given a solar metallicity, the dust-to-metals ratio is a factor of several lower than expected, hinting that galaxies beyond zz \sim 7 may have lower dust formation efficiency. Finally, the inferred nitrogen enrichment compared to oxygen, on which the metallicity measurement depends, indicates that star-formation in the system is older than about 250 Myr, pushing the beginnings of this galaxy to z>z > 10.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures; submitted to MNRA

    ALMA Lensing Cluster Survey: Properties of Millimeter Galaxies Hosting X-ray Detected Active Galactic Nuclei

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    We report the multi-wavelength properties of millimeter galaxies hosting X-ray detected active galactic nuclei (AGNs) from the ALMA Lensing Cluster Survey (ALCS). ALCS is an extensive survey of well-studied lensing clusters with ALMA, covering an area of 133 arcmin2^2 over 33 clusters with a 1.2 mm flux-density limit of {\sim}60 μJy\mathrm{\mu Jy} (1σ1\sigma). Utilizing the archival data of Chandra, we identify three AGNs at z=z=1.06, 2.09, and 2.84 among the 180 millimeter sources securely detected in the ALCS (of which 155 are inside the coverage of Chandra). The X-ray spectral analysis shows that two AGNs are not significantly absorbed (logNH/cm2<23\log N_{\mathrm{H}}/\mathrm{cm}^{-2} < 23), while the other shows signs of moderate absorption (logNH/cm223.5\log N_{\mathrm{H}}/\mathrm{cm}^{-2}\sim 23.5). We also perform spectral energy distribution (SED) modelling of X-ray to millimeter photometry. We find that our X-ray AGN sample shows both high mass accretion rates (intrinsic 0.5--8 keV X-ray luminosities of 1044–45erg s1{\sim}10^{\text{44--45}}\,\mathrm{erg\ s^{-1}}) and star-formation rates (100Myr1{\gtrsim}100\,M_{\odot}\,\mathrm{yr}^{-1}). This demonstrates that a wide-area survey with ALMA and Chandra can selectively detect intense growth of both galaxies and supermassive black holes (SMBHs) in the high-redshift universe.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figures, 2 table

    A galaxy group candidate at z approximate to 3.7 in the COSMOS field

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    We report a galaxy group candidate HPC1001 at z approximate to 3.7 in the COSMOS field. This structure was selected as a high galaxy overdensity at z > 3 in the COSMOS2020 catalog. It contains ten candidate members, of which eight are assembled in a 10 '' x 10 '' area with the highest sky density among known protoclusters and groups at z > 3. Four out of ten sources were also detected at 1.2mm with Atacama Large Millimeter Array continuum observations. Photometric redshifts, measured by four independent methods, fall within a narrow range of 3.5 < z < 3.9 and with a weighted average of z = 3.65 +/- 0.07. The integrated far-IR-to-radio spectral energy distribution yields a total UV and IR star formation rate SFR approximate to 900 M-circle dot yr(-1). We also estimated a halo mass of similar to 10(13) M-circle dot for the structure, which at this redshift is consistent with potential cold gas inflow. Remarkably, the most massive member has a specific star formation rate and dust to stellar mass ratio of M-dust/M-* that are both significantly lower than that of star-forming galaxies at this redshift, suggesting that HPC1001 could be a z approximate to 3.7 galaxy group in maturing phase. If confirmed, this would be the earliest structure in maturing phase to date, and an ideal laboratory to study the formation of the earliest quiescent galaxies as well as cold gas accretion in dense environments.Non peer reviewe

    Deceptively cold dust in the massive starburst galaxy GN20 at z ∼4

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    We present new observations, carried out with IRAM NOEMA, of the atomic neutral carbon transitions [C» I](3P1-3P0) at 492 GHz and [C» I](3P2-3P1) at 809 GHz of GN20, a well-studied star-bursting galaxy at z = 4.05. The high luminosity line ratio [C» I](3P2-3P1) /[C» I](3P1-3P0) implies an excitation temperature of 48+14-9 K, which is significantly higher than the apparent dust temperature of Td = 33 ± 2 K (β = 1.9) derived under the common assumption of an optically thin far-infrared dust emission, but fully consistent with Td = 52 ± 5 K of a general opacity model where the optical depth (τ) reaches unity at a wavelength of λ0 = 170 ± 23 μm. Moreover, the general opacity solution returns a factor of ∼2× lower dust mass and, hence, a lower molecular gas mass for a fixed gas-to-dust ratio, than with the optically thin dust model. The derived properties of GN20 thus provide an appealing solution to the puzzling discovery of starbursts appearing colder than main-sequence galaxies above z > 2.5, in addition to a lower dust-to-stellar mass ratio that approaches the physical value predicted for starburst galaxies

    JWSTJWST Insight Into a Lensed HSTHST-dark Galaxy and its Quiescent Companion at z=2.58z=2.58

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    Using the novel JWSTJWST/NIRCam observations in the Abell 2744 field, we present a first spatially resolved overview of an HSTHST-dark galaxy, spectroscopically confirmed at z=2.58z=2.58 with magnification μ1.9\mu\approx1.9. While being largely invisible at \sim1 μ\mum with NIRCam, except for sparse clumpy sub-structures, the object is well-detected and resolved in the long-wavelength bands with a spiral shape clearly visible in F277W. By combining ancillary ALMA and HerschelHerschel data, we infer that this object is an edge-on dusty spiral with an intrinsic stellar mass log(M/M)11.3(M_*/M_\odot)\sim11.3 and a dust-obscured SFR300 M\sim 300~M_\odot~yr1^{-1}. A massive quiescent galaxy (log(M/M)10.8(M_*/M_\odot)\sim10.8) with tidal features lies 2\farcs{0} away (rr\sim9 kpc), at a consistent redshift as inferred by JWSTJWST photometry, indicating a potential major merger. The dusty spiral lies on the main-sequence of star formation, and shows high dust attenuation in the optical (3<AV<4.53<A_{\rm V}<4.5). In the far-infrared, its integrated dust SED is optically thick up to λ0500\lambda_0 \sim 500 μ\mum, further supporting the extremely dusty nature. Spatially resolved analysis of the HSTHST-dark galaxy reveals a largely uniform AV4A_{\rm V}\sim 4 area spanning \sim57 kpc2^2, which spatially matches to the ALMA 1 mm continuum emission. Accounting for the surface brightness dimming and the depths of current JWSTJWST surveys, unlensed analogs of the HSTHST-dark galaxy at z>4z>4 would be only detectable in F356W and F444W in UNCOVER-like survey, and become totally JWSTJWST-dark at z6z\sim6. This suggests that detecting highly attenuated galaxies in the Epoch of Reionization might be a challenging task for JWSTJWST.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figures, 1 table. Accepted to ApJ

    Massive galaxy formation caught in action at z~5 with JWST

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    We report the discovery of a compact group of galaxies, CGG-z5, at z~5.2 in the EGS field covered by the JWST/CEERS survey. CGG-z5 was selected as the highest overdensity of galaxies at z>2 in recent JWST public surveys and it consists of six candidate members lying within a projected area of 1.5×31.5''\times3'' (10×\times20~kpc2^2). All group members are HST/F435W and HST/F606W dropouts while securely detected in the JWST/NIRCam bands, yielding a narrow range of robust photometric redshifts 5.0<z<5.35.0<z<5.3. The most massive galaxy in the group has a stellar mass log(M/M)9.8(M_{*}/M_{\odot})\approx9.8, while the rest are low-mass satellites (log(M/M)8.49.2(M_{*}/M_{\odot})\approx8.4-9.2). While several group members were already detected in the HST and IRAC bands, the low stellar masses and the compactness of the structure required the sensitivity and resolution of JWST for its identification. To assess the nature and evolutionary path of CGG-z5, we searched for similar compact structures in the \textsc{Eagle} simulations and followed their evolution with time. We find that all the identified structures merge into a single galaxy by z=3 and form a massive galaxy (log(M/M)>11(M_{*}/M_{\odot})>11) at z~1. This implies that CGG-z5 could be a "proto-massive galaxy" captured during a short-lived phase of massive galaxy formation.Comment: A&A Letter in pres

    ALMA Lensing Cluster Survey: Full Spectral Energy Distribution Analysis of z ∼ 0.5–6 Lensed Galaxies Detected with millimeter Observations

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    Sub/millimeter galaxies are a key population for the study of galaxy evolution because the majority of star formation at high redshifts occurred in galaxies deeply embedded in dust. To search for this population, we have performed an extensive survey with Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA), called the ALMA Lensing Cluster Survey (ALCS). This survey covers 133 arcmin2 area and securely detects 180 sources at z ∼ 0.5–6 with a flux limit of ∼0.2 mJy at 1.2 mm. Here, we report the results of multiwavelength spectral energy distribution analysis of the whole ALCS sample, utilizing the observed-frame UV to millimeter photometry. We find that the majority of the ALCS sources lie on the star-forming main sequence, with a smaller fraction showing intense starburst activities. The ALCS sample contains high infrared-excess sources ( IRX=log(Ldust/LUV)>1 ), including two extremely dust-obscured galaxies (IRX > 5). We also confirm that the ALCS sample probes a broader range in lower dust mass than conventional submillimeter galaxy samples in the same redshift range. We identify six heavily obscured active galactic nucleus (AGN) candidates that are not detected in the archival Chandra data in addition to the three X-ray AGNs reported by Uematsu et al. (2023). The inferred AGN luminosity density shows a possible excess at z = 2–3 compared with that determined from X-ray surveys below 10 keV
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