Resolving a merger in a hyper-luminous submillimeter galaxy at z=2.82

Abstract

We present the resolved properties of the z=2.82 Hyper Luminous Infrared Galaxy (HyLIRG) HS170850.1, the brightest 850μm source found in the SCUBA-2 followup to the Keck Baryonic Structure Survey fields (S 850 μ m=19.5 mJy), and amongst the most luminous starbursts known at any redshift. Using the IRAM-NOEMA interferometer in the highest resolution A-configuration, we resolve the source into two components separated by 8 kpc, visible as blue shifted and red shifted 12CO(5-4) lines, exhibiting the expected kinematic properties of a major merger between two gas-rich galaxies. The combined merger system is traced over 2.3'' or 18.3 kpc. Each component of the merger shows ordered gas motions suggestive of a massive, turbulent disk. We measure the masses of the blue and red disks as (1.5 0.2) ×1011 M and (0.71 0.22) ×1011 M respectively. The more massive disk component shows broad wings in the CO line, offset by 3 kpc from the disk centroid along the major axis, and extending to velocities 1000 km s-1 from systemic velocity. We interpret this as either a possible bipolar outflowing component, or more likely a warping or tidal structure in the CO disk. Comparing the properties of HS170850.1 to other submillimeter detected galaxies with comparably bright 850μm luminosities suggests that ongoing gas-rich mergers, or at least a clustered/group environment lead to these most extreme starburst phases.

0

Turn this paper into a full lesson

ArcXiv compiles a staged curriculum from this paper: 8-12 lessons across beginner → advanced, synthesised section guides, visuals, flashcards, a quiz, exercises, and on-demand deep dives per section. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.

Discussion (0)

Sign in to join the discussion.

Loading comments…