Detection of an ultra-bright submillimeter galaxy in the Subaru/XMM-Newton Deep Field using AzTEC/ASTE
S. Ikarashi (1), K. Kohno (1, 2), J. E. Aguirre (3), I. Aretxaga (4),, V. Arumugam (5), J. E. Austermann (6), J. J. Bock (7, 8), C. M. Bradford (7,, 8), M. Cirasuolo (5, 9) L. Earle (10), H. Ezawa (11), H. Furusawa (13), J., Furusawa (13), J. Glenn (10), B. Hatsukade (12)

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and detailed analysis of an ultra-bright, likely lensed submillimeter galaxy at high redshift, characterized by extreme luminosity and star formation rates, using multiple submillimeter and optical observations.
Contribution
First detection of an ultra-bright SMG in the Subaru/XMM-Newton Deep Field with multi-wavelength follow-up revealing its structure, redshift, and extreme star-forming properties.
Findings
Detected a 37 mJy submillimeter galaxy with AzTEC/ASTE.
Identified the galaxy as a likely lensed, optically dark SMG at z~3.4.
Estimated an infrared luminosity of 6×10^13 L_sun and a star formation rate of 11,000 M_sun/yr.
Abstract
We report the detection of an extremely bright (37 mJy at 1100 m and 91 mJy at 880 m) submillimeter galaxy (SMG), AzTEC-ASTE-SXDF1100.001 (hereafter referred to as SXDF1100.001 or Orochi), discovered in 1100 m observations of the Subaru/XMM-Newton Deep Field using AzTEC on ASTE. Subsequent CARMA 1300 m and SMA 880 m observations successfully pinpoint the location of Orochi and suggest that it has two components, one extended (FWHM of 4) and one compact (unresolved). Z-Spec on CSO has also been used to obtain a wide band spectrum from 190 to 308 GHz, although no significant emission/absorption lines are found. The derived upper limit to the line-to-continuum flux ratio is 0.1--0.3 (2 ) across the Z-Spec band. Based on the analysis of the derived spectral energy distribution from optical to radio wavelengths of…
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