Abstract

We report the detection of a 13σ\sigma Hα\alpha emission line from HDF850.1 at z=5.188±0.001z=5.188\pm0.001 using the FRESCO NIRCam F444W grism observations. Detection of Hα\alpha in HDF850.1 is noteworthy, given its high far-IR luminosity, substantial dust obscuration, and the historical challenges in deriving its redshift. HDF850.1 shows a clear detection in the F444W imaging data, distributed between a northern and southern component, mirroring that seen in [CII] from the Plateau de Bure Interferometer. Modeling the SED of each component separately, we find that the northern component has a higher mass, star formation rate (SFR), and dust extinction than the southern component. The observed Hα\alpha emission appears to arise entirely from the less-obscured southern component and shows a similar Δ\Deltav∼\sim+130 km/s velocity offset to that seen for [CII] relative to the source systemic redshift. Leveraging Hα\alpha-derived redshifts from FRESCO observations, we find that HDF850.1 is forming in one of the richest environments identified to date at z>5z>5, with 100 z=5.17−5.20z=5.17-5.20 galaxies distributed across 10 structures and a ∼\sim(15 cMpc)3^3 volume. Based on the evolution of analogous structures in cosmological simulations, the z=5.17−5.20z=5.17-5.20 structures seem likely to collapse into a single >>1014^{14} M⊙M_{\odot} cluster by z∼0z\sim0. Comparing galaxy properties forming within this overdensity with those outside, we find the masses, SFRs, and UVUV luminosities inside the overdensity to be clearly higher. The prominence of Hα\alpha line emission from HDF850.1 and other known highly-obscured z>5z>5 galaxies illustrates the potential of NIRCam-grism programs to map both the early build-up of IR-luminous galaxies and overdense structures.Comment: Submitted to MNRAS. 20 pages, 10 figures and 8 tables (including appendices

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