Early Science with the Large Millimeter Telescope: Observations of dust continuum and CO emission lines of cluster-lensed submillimetre galaxies at z=2.0-4.7
J. A. Zavala, M. S. Yun, I. Aretxaga, D. H. Hughes, G. W. Wilson, J., E. Geach, E. Egami, M. A. Gurwell, D. J. Wilner, Ian Smail, A. W. Blain, S., C. Chapman, K. E. K. Coppin, M. Dessauges-Zavadsky, A. C. Edge, A. Montana,, K. Nakajima, T. D. Rawle, D. Sanchez-Arguelles

TL;DR
This study uses the Large Millimeter Telescope to observe gravitationally lensed submillimetre galaxies at redshifts 2-5, detecting dust and CO emission lines to analyze their molecular gas and dust properties, star formation, and galaxy blending.
Contribution
First to combine early science observations with wide bandwidth spectra to study high-redshift lensed submillimetre galaxies and confirm predictions of galaxy blending and physical properties.
Findings
Detected dust continuum in all targets.
Identified multiple galaxies in one source at different redshifts.
Derived molecular gas and dust masses, confirming gas-to-dust ratios.
Abstract
We present Early Science observations with the Large Millimeter Telescope, AzTEC 1.1 mm continuum images and wide bandwidth spectra (73-111 GHz) acquired with the Redshift Search Receiver, towards four bright lensed submillimetre galaxies identified through the Herschel Lensing Survey-snapshot and the SCUBA-2 Cluster Snapshot Survey. This pilot project studies the star formation history and the physical properties of the molecular gas and dust content of the highest redshift galaxies identified through the benefits of gravitational magnification. We robustly detect dust continuum emission for the full sample and CO emission lines for three of the targets. We find that one source shows spectroscopic multiplicity and is a blend of three galaxies at different redshifts (z=2.040, 3.252 and 4.680), reminiscent of previous high-resolution imaging follow-up of unlensed submillimetre galaxies,…
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