Searching Far and Long I: Pilot ALMA 2mm Follow-up of Bright Dusty Galaxies as a Redshift Filter
Abstract
A complete census of dusty star-forming galaxies (DSFGs) at early epochs is necessary to constrain the obscured contribution to the cosmic star formation rate density (CSFRD), however DSFGs beyond z 4 are both rare and hard to identify from photometric data alone due to degeneracies in submillimeter photometry with redshift. Here, we present a pilot study obtaining follow-up Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA) 2\,mm observations of a complete sample of 39 850\,μ m-bright dusty galaxies in the SSA22 field. Empirical modeling suggests 2\,mm imaging of existing samples of DSFGs selected at 850\,μ m - 1\,mm can quickly and easily isolate the "needle in a haystack" DSFGs that sit at z>4 or beyond. Combining archival submillimeter imaging with our measured ALMA 2\,mm photometry (1σ 0.08\,mJy\,beam-1 rms), we characterize the galaxies' IR SEDs and use them to constrain redshifts. With available redshift constraints fit via the combination of six submillimeter bands, we identify 6/39 high-z candidates each with >50\% likelihood to sit at z > 4, and find a positive correlation between redshift and 2\,mm flux density. Specifically, our models suggest the addition of 2\,mm to a moderately constrained IR SED will improve the accuracy of a millimeter-derived redshift from z/(1+z) = 0.3 to z/(1+z) = 0.2. Our IR SED characterizations provide evidence for relatively high emissivity spectral indices ( β = 2.40.3) in the sample. We measure that especially bright (S850μ m>5.55\,mJy) DSFGs contribute 10% to the cosmic-averaged CSFRD from 2<z<5, confirming findings from previous work with similar samples.
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