Obscured star-formation in bright z ~ 7 Lyman-break galaxies

Abstract

We present Atacama Large Millimeter/Submillimeter Array observations of the rest-frame far-infrared (FIR) dust continuum emission of six bright Lyman-break galaxies (LBGs) at z 7. One LBG is detected (5.2σ at peak emission), while the others remain individually undetected at the 3σ level. The average FIR luminosity of the sample is found to be L FIR 2 × 1011\, L, corresponding to an obscured star-formation rate (SFR) that is comparable to that inferred from the unobscured UV emission. In comparison to the infrared excess (IRX\,=L FIR/L UV)-β relation, our results are consistent with a Calzetti-like attenuation law (assuming a dust temperature of T = 40-50 K). We find a physical offset of 3 kpc between the dust continuum emission and the rest-frame UV light probed by Hubble Space Telescope imaging for galaxy ID65666 at z = 7.17+0.09-0.06. The offset is suggestive of an inhomogeneous dust distribution, where 75% of the total star formation activity (SFR \, 70\, M/ yr) of the galaxy is completely obscured. Our results provide direct evidence that dust obscuration plays a key role in shaping the bright-end of the observed rest-frame UV luminosity function at z 7, in agreement with cosmological galaxy formation simulations. The existence of a heavily-obscured component of galaxy ID65666 indicates that dusty star-forming regions, or even entire galaxies, that are "UV-dark" are significant even in the z 7 galaxy population.

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