Extremely-bright submillimeter galaxies beyond the Lupus-I star-forming region
Y. Tamura, R. Kawabe, Y. Shimajiri, T. Tsukagoshi, Y. Nakajima, Y., Oasa, D. J. Wilner, C. J. Chandler, K. Saigo, K. Tomida, M. S. Yun, A., Taniguchi, K. Kohno, B. Hatsukade, I. Aretxaga, J. E. Austermann, R. Dickman,, H. Ezawa, W. M. Goss, M. Hayashi, D. H. Hughes, M. Hiramatsu

TL;DR
This study reports the discovery of two extremely bright, high-redshift submillimeter galaxies near the Lupus-I star-forming region, highlighting their potential gravitational lensing effects and the importance of multi-wavelength follow-up for accurate identification.
Contribution
First detection and characterization of two bright, distant SMGs in the Lupus-I region, with analysis of their redshifts, magnification, and implications for galaxy counts and lensing models.
Findings
SMGs have redshifts around 3-5, indicating they are very distant.
Luminosities are likely magnified by gravitational lensing.
Number counts are consistent with lensing models.
Abstract
We report detections of two candidate distant submillimeter galaxies (SMGs), MM J154506.4344318 and MM J154132.7350320, which are discovered in the AzTEC/ASTE 1.1 mm survey toward the Lupus-I star-forming region. The two objects have 1.1 mm flux densities of 43.9 and 27.1 mJy, and have Herschel/SPIRE counterparts as well. The Submillimeter Array counterpart to the former SMG is identified at 890 m and 1.3 mm. Photometric redshift estimates using all available data from the mid-infrared to the radio suggest that the redshifts of the two SMGs are 4-5 and 3, respectively. Near-infrared objects are found very close to the SMGs and they are consistent with low- ellipticals, suggesting that the high apparent luminosities can be attributed to gravitational magnification. The cumulative number counts at mJy, combined with other two…
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