The hidden HI-massive LIRG HIZOA J0836-43: Inside-out galaxy formation
Abstract
HIZOA J0836-43 is an extreme gas-rich (MHI=7.5×1010 M) disk galaxy which lies hidden behind the strongly obscuring Vela region of the Milky Way. Utilizing observations from the Spitzer Space Telescope, we have found it to be a luminous infrared starburst galaxy with a star formation rate of 21 M yr-1, arising from exceptionally strong molecular PAH emission (L7.7 = 1.50 × 109 L) and far-infrared emission from cold dust. The galaxy exhibits a weak mid-infrared continuum compared to other starforming galaxies and U/LIRGs. This relative lack of emission from small grains suggests atypical interstellar medium conditions compared to other starbursts. We do not detect significant [Ne v] or [O iv], which implies an absent or very weak AGN. The galaxy possesses a prominent bulge of evolved stars and a stellar mass of 4.4(1.4)×1010 M. With its plentiful gas supply and current star formation rate, a doubling of stellar mass would occur on a timescale of 2 Gyr. Compared to local galaxies, HIZOA J0836-43 appears to be a "scaled-up" spiral undergoing inside-out formation, possibly resembling stellar disk building processes at intermediate redshifts.
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