JWST Insight into a Lensed HST-dark Galaxy and Its Quiescent Companion at z = 2.58

  • Kokorev V
  • Jin S
  • Magdis G
  • et al.
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Abstract

Using the novel James Webb Space Telescope (JWST)/NIRCam observations in the A2744 field, we present a first spatially resolved overview of a Hubble Space Telescope (HST)-dark galaxy, spectroscopically confirmed at z = 2.58 with magnification μ ≈ 1.9. While being largely invisible at ∼1 μ m with NIRCam, except for sparse clumpy substructures, the object is well detected and resolved in the long-wavelength bands with a spiral shape clearly visible in F277W. By combining ancillary Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) and Herschel data, we infer that this object is an edge-on dusty spiral with an intrinsic stellar mass log ( M * / M ⊙ ) ∼ 11.3 and a dust-obscured star formation rate ∼300 M ⊙ yr −1 . A massive quiescent galaxy (log ( M * / M ⊙ ) ∼ 10.8) with tidal features lies 2.″0 away ( r ∼ 9 kpc), at a consistent redshift as inferred by JWST 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 < A V < 4.5). In the far-infrared, its integrated dust spectral energy distribution is optically thick up to λ 0 ∼ 500 μ m, further supporting the extremely dusty nature. Spatially resolved analysis of the HST-dark galaxy reveals a largely uniform A V ∼ 4 area spanning ∼57 kpc 2 , which spatially matches to the ALMA 1 mm continuum emission. Accounting for the surface brightness dimming and the depths of current JWST surveys, unlensed analogs of the HST-dark galaxy at z > 4 would be only detectable in F356W and F444W in an UNCOVER-like survey, and become totally JWST-dark at z ∼ 6. This suggests that detecting highly attenuated galaxies in the Epoch of Reionization might be a challenging task for JWST.

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APA

Kokorev, V., Jin, S., Magdis, G. E., Caputi, K. I., Valentino, F., Dayal, P., … Navarro-Carrera, R. (2023). JWST Insight into a Lensed HST-dark Galaxy and Its Quiescent Companion at z = 2.58. The Astrophysical Journal Letters, 945(2), L25. https://doi.org/10.3847/2041-8213/acbd9d

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