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Herschel and Hubble study of a lensed massive dusty starbursting galaxy at $z\sim3$

Authors :
Nayyeri, H.
Cooray, A.
Jullo, E.
Riechers, D. A.
Leung, T. K. D.
Frayer, D. T.
Gurwell, M. A.
Harris, A. I.
Ivison, R. J.
Negrello, M.
Oteo, I.
Amber, S.
Baker, A. J.
Calanog, J.
Casey, C. M.
Dannerbauer, H.
De Zotti, G.
Eales, S.
Fu, H.
Michałowski, M. J.
Timmons, N.
Wardlow, J. L.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

We present the results of combined deep Keck/NIRC2, HST/WFC3 near-infrared and Herschel far infrared observations of an extremely star forming dusty lensed galaxy identified from the Herschel Astrophysical Terahertz Large Area Survey (H-ATLAS J133542.9+300401). The galaxy is gravitationally lensed by a massive WISE identified galaxy cluster at $z\sim1$. The lensed galaxy is spectroscopically confirmed at $z=2.685$ from detection of $\rm {CO (1 \rightarrow 0)}$ by GBT and from detection of $\rm {CO (3 \rightarrow 2)}$ obtained with CARMA. We use the combined spectroscopic and imaging observations to construct a detailed lens model of the background dusty star-forming galaxy (DSFG) which allows us to study the source plane properties of the target. The best-fit lens model provide magnification of $\mu_{\rm star}=2.10\pm0.11$ and $\mu_{\rm dust}=2.02\pm0.06$ for the stellar and dust components respectively. Multi-band data yields a magnification corrected star formation rate of $1900(\pm200)\,M_{\odot}{\rm yr^{-1}}$ and stellar mass of $6.8_{-2.7}^{+0.9}\times10^{11}\,M_{\odot}$ consistent with a main sequence of star formation at $z\sim2.6$. The CO observations yield a molecular gas mass of $8.3(\pm1.0)\times10^{10}\,M_{\odot}$, similar to the most massive star-forming galaxies, which together with the high star-formation efficiency are responsible for the intense observed star formation rates. The lensed DSFG has a very short gas depletion time scale of $\sim40$ Myr. The high stellar mass and small gas fractions observed indicate that the lensed DSFG likely has already formed most of its stellar mass and could be a progenitor of the most massive elliptical galaxies found in the local Universe.<br />Comment: 15 Pages, 10 Figures, 2 Tables. Accepted to the Astrophysical Journal

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1701.01121
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/aa7aa0