Paschen-alpha Emission in the Gravitationally Lensed Galaxy SMM J163554.2+661225
Casey Papovich (1), Gregory Rudnick (2), Jane Rigby (3), Christopher, Willmer (4), J.-D. Smith (5), Steven Finkelstein (1), Eiichi Egami (4), and, Marcia Rieke (4) ((1) Texas A&M University, (2) University of Kansas, (3), Carnegie Observatories, (4) Steward Observatory

TL;DR
This study detects Paschen-alpha emission in a gravitationally lensed galaxy at z=2.515, revealing its star formation rate and dust properties, and comparing it to local galaxy analogs.
Contribution
First detection of Paschen-alpha in a high-redshift lensed galaxy, providing new insights into its star formation and dust characteristics.
Findings
Star formation rate is approximately 171 solar masses per year.
Galaxy's dust temperature appears lower than local counterparts.
Paschen-alpha luminosity aligns with star-forming galaxy relations.
Abstract
We report the detection of the Paschen-alpha emission line in the z=2.515 galaxy SMM J163554.2+661225 using Spitzer spectroscopy. SMM J163554.2+661225 is a sub-millimeter-selected infrared (IR)-luminous galaxy maintaining a high star-formation rate (SFR), with no evidence of an AGN from optical or infrared spectroscopy, nor X-ray emission. This galaxy is lensed gravitationally by the cluster Abell 2218, making it accessible to Spitzer spectroscopy. Correcting for nebular extinction derived from the H-alpha and Pa-alpha lines, the dust-corrected luminosity is L(Pa-alpha) = (2.57+/-0.43) x 10^43 erg s^-1, which corresponds to an ionization rate, Q = (1.6+/-0.3) x 10^55 photons s^-1. The instantaneous SFR is 171+/-28 solar masses per year, assuming a Salpeter-like initial mass function. The total IR luminosity derived using 70, 450, and 850 micron data is L(IR) = (5-10) x 10^11 solar…
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