High Sensitivity Array Observations of the z=1.87 Sub-Millimeter Galaxy GOODS 850-3
E. Momjian, W-H. Wang, K. K. Knudsen, C. L. Carilli, L. L. Cowie, A., J. Barger

TL;DR
This study uses high-sensitivity VLBI observations to analyze the radio emission of a distant submillimeter galaxy, revealing starburst activity without evidence of an active galactic nucleus, and providing insights into galaxy evolution at high redshift.
Contribution
First high-resolution VLBI imaging of GOODS 850-3, demonstrating starburst-driven radio emission and ruling out a compact AGN at milliarcsecond scales.
Findings
Radio emission consistent with a starburst origin.
No compact AGN detected at milliarcsecond resolution.
Star formation rate estimated at ~2500 solar masses per year.
Abstract
We present sensitive phase-referenced VLBI results on the radio continuum emission from the z=1.87 luminous submillimeter galaxy (SMG) GOODS 850-3. The observations were carried out at 1.4 GHz using the High Sensitivity Array (HSA). Our sensitive tapered VLBI image of GOODS 850-3 at 0.47 x 0.34 arcsec (3.9 x 2.9 kpc) resolution shows a marginally resolved continuum structure with a peak flux density of 148 \pm 38 uJy/beam, and a total flux density of 168 \pm 73 uJy, consistent with previous VLA and MERLIN measurements. The derived intrinsic brightness temperature is > 5 \pm 2 x 10^3 K. The radio continuum position of this galaxy coincides with a bright and extended near-infrared source that nearly disappears in the deep HST optical image, indicating a dusty source of nearly 9 kpc in diameter. No continuum emission is detected at the full VLBI resolution (13.2 x 7.2 mas, 111 x 61 pc),…
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