Discovery of a dark, massive, ALMA-only galaxy at z~5-6 in a tiny 3-millimeter survey

Abstract

We report the serendipitous detection of two 3 mm continuum sources found in deep ALMA Band 3 observations to study intermediate redshift galaxies in the COSMOS field. One is near a foreground galaxy at 1.3", but is a previously unknown dust-obscured star-forming galaxy (DSFG) at probable zCO=3.329, illustrating the risk of misidentifying shorter wavelength counterparts. The optical-to-mm spectral energy distribution (SED) favors a grey λ-0.4 attenuation curve and results in significantly larger stellar mass and SFR compared to a Calzetti starburst law, suggesting caution when relating progenitors and descendants based on these quantities. The other source is missing from all previous optical/near-infrared/sub-mm/radio catalogs ("ALMA-only"), and remains undetected even in stacked ultradeep optical (>29.6 AB) and near-infrared (>27.9 AB) images. Using the ALMA position as a prior reveals faint SNR3 measurements in stacked IRAC 3.6+4.5, ultradeep SCUBA2 850μm, and VLA 3GHz, indicating the source is real. The SED is robustly reproduced by a massive M*=1010.8M and Mgas=1011M, highly obscured AV4, star forming SFR300 Myr-1 galaxy at redshift z=5.51.1. The ultrasmall 8 arcmin2 survey area implies a large yet uncertain contribution to the cosmic star formation rate density CSFRD(z=5) 0.9×10-2 M yr-1 Mpc-3, comparable to all ultraviolet-selected galaxies combined. These results indicate the existence of a prominent population of DSFGs at z>4, below the typical detection limit of bright galaxies found in single-dish sub-mm surveys, but with larger space densities 3 × 10-5 Mpc-3, higher duty cycles 50-100\%, contributing more to the CSFRD, and potentially dominating the high-mass galaxy stellar mass function.

0

Turn this paper into a lesson

ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.

Discussion (0)

Sign in to join the discussion.

Loading comments…