Infrared Galaxies in the Field of the Massive Cluster Abell S1063: Discovery of a Luminous Kiloparsec-Sized HII Region in a Gravitationally Lensed IR-Luminous Galaxy at z=0.6

Abstract

Using the Spitzer Space Telescope and Herschel Space Observatory, we have conducted a survey of infrared galaxies in the field of the galaxy cluster Abell S1063 (AS1063) at z=0.347, which is one of the most massive clusters known and a target of the HST CLASH and Frontier-Field surveys. The Spitzer/MIPS 24 μm and Herschel/PACS & SPIRE images revealed that the core of AS1063 is surprisingly devoid of infrared sources, showing only a few detectable sources within the central r1. There is, however, one particularly bright source (2.3 mJy at 24 μm; 106 mJy at 160 μm), which corresponds to a background galaxy at z=0.61. The modest magnification factor (4.0×) implies that this galaxy is intrinsically IR-luminous (L IR=3.1×1011\ L). What is particularly interesting about this galaxy is that HST optical/near-infrared images show a remarkably bright and large (1 kpc) clump at one edge of the disk. Our follow-up optical/near-infrared spectroscopy shows Balmer (Hα-H8) and forbidden emission from this clump ([OII] λ3727, [OIII] λλ4959,5007, [NII] λλ6548,6583), indicating that it is a HII region. The HII region appears to have formed in-situ, as kinematically it is part of a rotating disk, and there is no evidence of nearby interacting galaxies. With an extinction correction of A V=1.5 mag, the star formation rate of this giant HII region is 10 M yr-1, which is exceptionally large, even for high redshift HII regions. Such a large and luminous HII region is often seen at z2 but quite rare in the nearby Universe.

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