Ned-allsky

The Redshift and Nature of AzTEC/COSMOS 1: A Starburst Galaxy at z = 4.6

April 2011 • 2011ApJ...731L..27S

Authors • Smolčić, V. • Capak, P. • Ilbert, O. • Blain, A. W. • Salvato, M. • Aretxaga, I. • Schinnerer, E. • Masters, D. • Morić, I. • Riechers, D. A. • Sheth, K. • Aravena, M. • Aussel, H. • Aguirre, J. • Berta, S. • Carilli, C. L. • Civano, F. • Fazio, G. • Huang, J. • Hughes, D. • Kartaltepe, J. • Koekemoer, A. M. • Kneib, J. -P. • LeFloc'h, E. • Lutz, D. • McCracken, H. • Mobasher, B. • Murphy, E. • Pozzi, F. • Riguccini, L. • Sanders, D. B. • Sargent, M. • Scott, K. S. • Scoville, N. Z. • Taniguchi, Y. • Thompson, D. • Willott, C. • Wilson, G. • Yun, M.

Abstract • Based on broadband/narrowband photometry and Keck DEIMOS spectroscopy, we report a redshift of z = 4.64+0.06 -0.08 for AzTEC/COSMOS 1, the brightest submillimeter galaxy (SMG) in the AzTEC/COSMOS field. In addition to the COSMOS-survey X-ray to radio data, we report observations of the source with Herschel/PACS (100, 160 μm), CSO/SHARC II (350 μm), and CARMA and PdBI (3 mm). We do not detect CO(5 → 4) line emission in the covered redshift ranges, 4.56-4.76 (PdBI/CARMA) and 4.94-5.02 (CARMA). If the line is within this bandwidth, this sets 3σ upper limits on the gas mass to lsim8 × 109 M sun and lsim5 × 1010 M sun, respectively (assuming similar conditions as observed in z ~ 2 SMGs). This could be explained by a low CO-excitation in the source. Our analysis of the UV-IR spectral energy distribution of AzTEC 1 shows that it is an extremely young (lsim50 Myr), massive (M * ~ 1011 M sun), but compact (lsim2 kpc) galaxy, forming stars at a rate of ~1300 M sun yr-1. Our results imply that AzTEC 1 is forming stars in a "gravitationally bound" regime in which gravity prohibits the formation of a superwind, leading to matter accumulation within the galaxy and further generations of star formation.

Based on observations with the W. M. Keck Observatory, the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope, the United Kingdom Infrared Telescope, the Subaru Telescope, the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope, the NASA Spitzer Telescope, the Caltech Sub-mm Observatory, the Smithsonian Millimeter Array, and the National Radio Astronomy Observatory. Herschel is an ESA space observatory with science instruments provided by European-led Principal Investigator consortia and with important participation from NASA.

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IPAC Authors
(alphabetical)

Elise_furlan

Elise Furlan

Associate Scientist


Daniel Masters

Assistant Scientist