SCUBADive II: Searching for z>4 Dust-Obscured Galaxies via F150W-Dropouts in COSMOS-Web

Abstract

The relative fraction of obscured galaxies at z>4 compared to lower redshifts remains highly uncertain as accurate bookkeeping of the dust-obscured component proves difficult. We address this shortcoming with SCUBADive, a compilation of the JWST counterparts of (sub-)millimeter galaxies in COSMOS-Web, in order to further analyze the distribution and properties of massive dust-obscured galaxies at early times. In this paper, we present a subset of SCUBADive, focusing on 60 ``dark'' galaxies that dropout at 1.5. Motivated by JWST observations of AzTECC71, a far-infrared bright F150W-dropout with z phot=5.7+0.8-0.7, we complete a systematic search of F150W-dropouts with SCUBA-2 and ALMA detections to find more candidate high redshift dusty galaxies. Within our subsample, 16 are most similar to AzTECC71 due to fainter F444W magnitudes (>24\,mag) and lack of counterparts in COSMOS2020. Despite high star formation rates (=450+920-320\,\,yr-1) and large stellar masses (10()=11.2+0.5-0.6\,) on average, these galaxies may not be particularly extreme for their presumed epochs according to offsets from the main sequence. We find that heavily obscured galaxies, which would be missed by pre-JWST optical imaging campaigns, comprise 20\% of galaxies across mass bins and potentially contribute up to 60\% at the very high mass end (log10(/)>11.5) of the z>4 stellar mass function.

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