A Strongly Lensed Dusty Starburst of an Intrinsic Disk Morphology at a Photometric Redshift of z ph > 7

  • Ling C
  • Sun B
  • Cheng C
  • et al.
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Abstract

We present COSBO-7, a strong millimeter source known for more than 16 yr that just revealed its near-to-mid-IR counterpart with the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST). The precise pinpointing by the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array on the exquisite NIRCam and MIRI images show that it is a background source gravitationally lensed by a single foreground galaxy, and the analysis of its spectral energy distribution by different tools is in favor of photometric redshift at z ph > 7. Strikingly, our lens modeling based on the JWST data shows that it has a regular disk morphology in the source plane. The dusty region giving rise to the far-IR-to-millimeter emission seems to be confined to a limited region to one side of the disk and has a high dust temperature of >90 K. The galaxy is experiencing starburst both within and outside of this dusty region. After taking the lensing magnification of μ ≈ 2.5–3.6 into account, the intrinsic star formation rate is several hundred M ⊙ yr −1 both within the dusty region and across the more extended stellar disk, and the latter already has >10 10 M ⊙ of stars in place. If it is indeed at z > 7, COSBO-7 presents an extraordinary case that is against the common wisdom about galaxy formation in the early Universe; simply put, its existence poses a critical question to be answered: how could a massive disk galaxy come into being so early in the Universe and sustain its regular morphology in the middle of an enormous starburst?

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Ling, C., Sun, B., Cheng, C., Li, N., Ma, Z., & Yan, H. (2024). A Strongly Lensed Dusty Starburst of an Intrinsic Disk Morphology at a Photometric Redshift of z ph > 7. The Astrophysical Journal Letters, 969(2), L28. https://doi.org/10.3847/2041-8213/ad59a3

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