ALMA reveals metals yet no dust within multiple components in CR7

Abstract

We present spectroscopic follow-up observations of CR7 with ALMA, targeted at constraining the infrared (IR) continuum and [CII]158 μ m line-emission at high spatial resolution matched to the HST/WFC3 imaging. CR7 is a luminous Lyα emitting galaxy at z=6.6 that consists of three separated UV-continuum components. Our observations reveal several well-separated components of [CII] emission. The two most luminous components in [CII] coincide with the brightest UV components (A and B), blue-shifted by ≈ 150 km s-1 with respect to the peak of Lyα emission. Other [CII] components are observed close to UV clumps B and C and are blue-shifted by ≈300 and ≈80 km s-1 with respect to the systemic redshift. We do not detect FIR continuum emission due to dust with a 3σ limiting luminosity L IR (Td = 35 \, K) < 3.1×1010 L. This allows us to mitigate uncertainties in the dust-corrected SFR and derive SFRs for the three UV clumps A, B and C of 28, 5 and 7 M yr-1. All clumps have [CII] luminosities consistent within the scatter observed in the local relation between SFR and L [CII], implying that strong Lyα emission does not necessarily anti-correlate with [CII] luminosity. Combining our measurements with the literature, we show that galaxies with blue UV slopes have weaker [CII] emission at fixed SFR, potentially due to their lower metallicities and/or higher photoionisation. Comparison with hydrodynamical simulations suggests that CR7's clumps have metallicities of 0.1< Z/Z<0.2. The observed ISM structure of CR7 indicates that we are likely witnessing the build up of a central galaxy in the early Universe through complex accretion of satellites.

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