The ALMA Frontier Fields survey I: 1.1 mm continuum detections in Abell 2744, MACSJ0416.1-2403 and MACSJ1149.5+2223
J. Gonz\'alez-L\'opez, F. E. Bauer, C. Romero-Ca\~nizales, R. Kneissl,, E. Villard, R. Carvajal, S. Kim, N. Laporte, T. Anguita, M. Aravena, R. J., Bouwens, L. Bradley, M. Carrasco, R. Demarco, H. Ford, E. Ibar, L. Infante,, H. Messias, A. M. Mu\~noz Arancibia, N. Nagar

TL;DR
This study uses ALMA 1.1 mm observations of three galaxy clusters to detect faint dusty star-forming galaxies at high redshift, providing insights into their properties and contribution to galaxy evolution.
Contribution
First to systematically probe sub-mJy dusty star-forming galaxies in high-magnification cluster fields using ALMA, expanding understanding of faint galaxy populations at high redshift.
Findings
Detected 12 dusty star-forming galaxies with S/N>5 across three clusters.
Galaxies have flux densities from 0.41 to 2.82 mJy and sizes similar to brighter samples.
None of the sources are strongly lensed, indicating they are intrinsic faint galaxies.
Abstract
Dusty star-forming galaxies are among the most prodigious systems at high redshift (z>1), characterized by high star formation rates and huge dust reservoirs. The bright end of this population has been well characterized in recent years, but considerable uncertainties remain for fainter dusty star-forming galaxies, which are responsible for the bulk of star formation at high redshift and thus play a key role in galaxy growth and evolution. In this first paper of our series, we describe our methods for finding high redshift faint dusty galaxies using millimeter observations with ALMA. We obtained ALMA 1.1 mm mosaic images for three strong-lensing galaxy clusters from the Frontier Fields survey. The 2'x2' mosaics overlap with the deep HST WFC3/IR footprints and encompass the high magnification regions of each cluster. The combination of extremely high ALMA sensitivity and the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
