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Published August 1, 2013 | Submitted + Published
Journal Article Open

Herschel-ATLAS: A Binary HyLIRG Pinpointing a Cluster of Starbursting Protoellipticals

Abstract

Panchromatic observations of the best candidate hyperluminous infrared galaxies from the widest Herschel extragalactic imaging survey have led to the discovery of at least four intrinsically luminous z = 2.41 galaxies across an 100 kpc region—a cluster of starbursting protoellipticals. Via subarcsecond interferometric imaging we have measured accurate gas and star formation surface densities. The two brightest galaxies span ~3 kpc FWHM in submillimeter/radio continuum and CO J = 4-3, and double that in CO J = 1-0. The broad CO line is due partly to the multitude of constituent galaxies and partly to large rotational velocities in two counter-rotating gas disks—a scenario predicted to lead to the most intense starbursts, which will therefore come in pairs. The disks have M_(dyn) of several × 10^(11) M ☉, and gas fractions of ~40%. Velocity dispersions are modest so the disks are unstable, potentially on scales commensurate with their radii: these galaxies are undergoing extreme bursts of star formation, not confined to their nuclei, at close to the Eddington limit. Their specific star formation rates place them 5 × above the main sequence, which supposedly comprises large gas disks like these. Their high star formation efficiencies are difficult to reconcile with a simple volumetric star formation law. N-body and dark matter simulations suggest that this system is the progenitor of a B(inary)-type 10^(14.6)-M ☉ cluster.

Additional Information

© 2013 The American Astronomical Society. Received 2013 February 12; accepted 2013 June 11; published 2013 July 17. R.J.I. acknowledges support from the European Research Council (ERC) in the form of Advanced Grant, cosmicism. The Herschel-ATLAS is a project with Herschel, which is an ESA Space Observatory with science instruments provided by European-led Principal Investigator consortia and with important participation from NASA. The H-ATLAS Web site is www.h-atlas.org. US participants in H-ATLAS acknowledge support from NASA through a contract from JPL. I.R.S. acknowledges support from STFC and ERC. M.N. and G.dZ. acknowledge financial support from ASI/INAF Agreement I/072/09/0. Facilities: CARMA, CSO, Herschel, HST, IRAM: Interferometer, VLA, Keck:II, SMA, Spitzer, ESO: VISTA

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Published - 0004-637X_772_2_137.pdf

Submitted - 1302.4436v2.pdf

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Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 24, 2023