Milky Way-Like Gas Excitation in an Ultrabright Submillimeter Galaxy at z=1.6

Abstract

Based on observations with the IRAM 30-m and Yebes 40-m telescopes, we report evidence of the detection of Milky Way-like, low-excitation molecular gas, up to the transition CO(J=5-4), in a distant, dusty star-forming galaxy at zCO=1.60454. WISE J122651.0+214958.8 (alias SDSSJ1226, the Cosmic Seahorse), is strongly lensed by a foreground galaxy cluster at z=0.44 with a source magnification of μ=9.50.7. This galaxy was selected by cross-correlating near-to-mid infrared colours within the full-sky AllWISE survey, originally aiming to discover rare analogs of the archetypical strongly lensed submillimeter galaxy SMM J2135-0102, the Cosmic Eyelash. We derive an apparent (i.e. not corrected for lensing magnification) rest-frame 8-1000 μm infrared luminosity of μ LIR=1.66+0.04-0.04× 1013 L and apparent star-formation rate μSFRIR=296070 M yr-1. SDSSJ1226 is ultra-bright at S350μ m170 mJy and shows similarly bright low-J CO line intensities as SMM J2135-0102, however, with exceptionally small CO(J=5-4) intensity. We consider different scenarios to reconcile our observations with typical findings of high-z starbursts, and speculate about the presence of a previously unseen star-formation mechanism in cosmic noon submillimeter galaxies. In conclusion, the remarkable low line luminosity ratio r5,2=0.110.02 is best explained by an extended, main-sequence star-formation mode -- representing a missing link between starbursts to low-luminosity systems during the epoch of peak star-formation history.

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