Physical Characterization of Serendipitously Uncovered Millimeter-wave Line-emitting Galaxies at z~2.5 behind the Local Luminous Infrared Galaxy VV114

Abstract

We present a detailed investigation of millimeter-wave line emitters ALMA J010748.3-173028 (ALMA-J0107a) and ALMA J010747.0-173010 (ALMA-J0107b), which were serendipitously uncovered in the background of the nearby galaxy VV114 with spectral scan observations at λ = 2 - 3 mm. Via Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) detection of CO(4-3), CO(3-2), and [CI](1-0) lines for both sources, their spectroscopic redshifts are unambiguously determined to be z= 2.46660.0002 and z=2.31000.0002, respectively. We obtain the apparent molecular gas masses M gas of these two line emitters from [CI] line fluxes as (11.2 3.1) × 1010 M and (4.2 1.2) × 1010 M, respectively. The observed CO(4-3) velocity field of ALMA-J0107a exhibits a clear velocity gradient across the CO disk, and we find that ALMA-J0107a is characterized by an inclined rotating disk with a significant turbulence, that is, a deprojected maximum rotation velocity to velocity dispersion ratio v max/σv of 1.3 0.3. We find that the dynamical mass of ALMA-J0107a within the CO-emitting disk computed from the derived kinetic parameters, (1.1 0.2) × 1010\ M, is an order of magnitude smaller than the molecular gas mass derived from dust continuum emission, (3.21.6)×1011\ M. We suggest this source is magnified by a gravitational lens with a magnification of μ 10, which is consistent with the measured offset from the empirical correlation between CO-line luminosity and width.

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