Measuring Star-formation Rate and Far-Infrared Color in High-redshift Galaxies Using the CO (7-6) and [NII] 205 micron Lines
Nanyao Lu, Yinghe Zhao, C. Kevin Xu, Yu Gao, Tanio Diaz-Santos,, Vassilis Charmandaris, Hanae Inami, Justin Howell, Lijie Liu, Lee Armus,, Joseph Mazzarella, George C. Privon, Steven D. Lord, David B. Sanders,, Bernhard Schulz, and Paul P. van der Werf

TL;DR
This paper introduces a spectroscopic method using CO (7-6) and [NII] 205 micron lines to estimate star formation rates and far-infrared colors in high-redshift galaxies, providing a less contaminated and more metallicity-insensitive approach.
Contribution
It develops new SFR and FIR color estimators based on two emission lines, validated with local and high-redshift galaxy data, improving upon previous methods.
Findings
CO (7-6) luminosity correlates tightly with total infrared luminosity as a star formation rate indicator.
The [NII]/CO (7-6) luminosity ratio correlates with FIR color, enabling dust temperature estimation.
The estimators are consistent with data up to redshift ~6.5.
Abstract
To better characterize the global star formation (SF) activity in a galaxy, one needs to know not only the star formation rate (SFR) but also the rest-frame, far-infrared (FIR) color (e.g., the 60-to-100 m color, ] of the dust emission. The latter probes the average intensity of the dust heating radiation field and scales statistically with the effective SFR surface density in star-forming galaxies including (ultra-)luminous infrared galaxies [(U)LIRGs]. To this end, we exploit here a new spectroscopic approach involving only two emission lines: CO\,(76) at 372 m and [NII] at 205 m. For local (U)LIRGs, the ratios of the CO (76) luminosity () to the total infrared luminosity (; 81000 m) are fairly tightly distributed (to within 0.12 dex) and show little dependence on . This makes a…
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