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A SCUBA-2 Selected Herschel-SPIRE Dropout and the Nature of this Population

Authors :
J. Greenslade
Helmut Dannerbauer
M. Velázquez
Paola Andreani
Michał J. Michałowski
Ivan Oteo
I. Perez Fournon
Itziar Aretxaga
Glen Petitpas
Stephen Anthony Eales
David H. Hughes
Duncan Farrah
C. Yang
Asantha Cooray
David L. Clements
M. S. Yun
N. Ponthieu
Loretta Dunne
Hugo Messias
E. Aguilar
T. Cheng
David Sánchez-Arguelles
Source :
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Dusty star-forming galaxies (DSFGs) detected at $z > 4$ provide important examples of the first generations of massive galaxies. However, few examples with spectroscopic confirmation are currently known, with Hershel struggling to detect significant numbers of $z > 6$ DSFGs. NGP6_D1 is a bright 850 $��m$ source (12.3 $\pm$ 2.5 mJy) with no counterparts at shorter wavelengths (a SPIRE dropout). Interferometric observations confirm it is a single source, with no evidence for any optical or NIR emission, or nearby likely foreground lensing sources. No $>3��$ detected lines are seen in both LMT RSR and IRAM 30m EMIR spectra of NGP6_D1 across 32 $GHz$ of bandwidth despite reaching detection limits of $\sim 1 mJy/500 km~s^{-1}$, so the redshift remains unknown. Template fitting suggests that NGP6_D1 is most likely between $z = 5.8$ and 8.3. SED analysis finds that NGP6_D1 is a ULIRG, with a dust mass $\sim 10^8$ - $10^9$ $M_{\odot}$ and a SFR of $\sim$ 500 $M_{\odot}~yr^{-1}$. We place upper limits on the gas mass of NGP6_D1 of $M_{H2}$ $ < (1.1~\pm~3.5) \times 10^{11}$ $M_{\odot}$, consistent with a gas-to-dust ratio of $\sim$ 100 - 1000. We discuss the nature of NGP6_D1 in the context of the broader submm population, and find that comparable SPIRE dropouts account for $\sim$ 20% of all SCUBA-2 detected sources, but with a similar flux density distribution to the general population.<br />Accepoted for publication in MNRAS

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00358711
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e40ea5232860c37d5d5dcf2b15af9bac