Cold Dust and Low [OIII]/[CII] Ratios: an Evolved Star-forming Population at Redshift 7

Abstract

We present new ALMA Band 8 (rest-frame 90\,μm) observations of three massive (M ≈ 1010\,M) galaxies at z≈7 previously detected in [CII]158\,μm and underlying dust continuum emission in the Reionization Era Bright Emission Line Survey (REBELS). We detect the dust continuum emission of two of our targets in Band 8 (REBELS-25 and REBELS-38), while REBELS-12 remains undetected. Through modified blackbody fitting we determine cold dust temperatures (Tdust ≈ 30 - 35\,K) in both of the dual-band detected targets, given a fiducial model of optically thin emission with β = 2.0. Their dust temperatures are lower than most z7 galaxies in the literature, and consequently their dust masses are higher (Mdust ≈ 108\,M). Nevertheless, these large dust masses are still consistent with predictions from models of dust production in the early Universe. In addition, we target and detect [OIII]88\,μm emission in both REBELS-12 and REBELS-25, and find L[OIII] / L[CII] ratios of approximately unity, low compared to the L[OIII] / L[CII] 2 - 10 observed in the known z6 population thus far. We argue the lower line ratios are due to a comparatively weaker ionizing radiation field resulting from the less starbursty nature of our targets. This low burstiness supports the cold dust temperatures and below average [OIII]λλ4959,5007 + Hβ equivalent widths of REBELS-25 and REBELS-38, compared to the known high-redshift population. Overall, this provides evidence for the existence of a massive, dust-rich galaxy population at z≈7 which has previously experienced vigorous star formation, but is currently forming stars in a steady, as opposed to bursty, manner.

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