Obscured Starburst Activity in High Redshift Clusters and Groups
Dale D. Kocevski, Brian C. Lemaux, Lori M. Lubin, Roy R. Gal,, Elizabeth J. McGrath, Christopher D. Fassnacht, Gordon K. Squires, Jason A., Surace, and Mark Lacy

TL;DR
This study reveals that high-redshift clusters and groups have an increased density of obscured, star-forming galaxies, often triggered by mergers, which are not optically prominent but show signs of recent starburst activity.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the nature, distribution, and triggering mechanisms of obscured star formation in high-redshift clusters and groups, highlighting the role of mergers.
Findings
Higher density of 24um-detected galaxies in clusters compared to the field.
Obscured galaxies often show signs of recent starburst activity.
Mergers are the primary trigger for enhanced star formation in these environments.
Abstract
Using Spitzer-MIPS 24um imaging and Keck spectroscopy we examine the nature of the obscured star forming population in three clusters and three groups at z~0.9. These six systems are components of the Cl1604 supercluster, the largest structure imaged by Spitzer at redshifts near unity. We find that the average density of 24um-detected galaxies within the Cl1604 clusters is nearly twice that of the surrounding field and that this overdensity scales with the cluster's dynamical state. The 24um-bright members often appear optically unremarkable and exhibit only moderate [OII] line emission due to severe obscuration. Their spatial distribution suggests they are an infalling population, but an examination of their spectral properties, morphologies and optical colors indicate they are not simply analogs of the field population that have yet to be quenched. Using stacked composite spectra, we…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
