SPT0346-52: Negligible AGN Activity in a Compact, Hyper-starburst Galaxy at z = 5.7
Jingzhe Ma, A. H. Gonzalez, J. D. Vieira, M. Aravena, M. L. N. Ashby,, M. Bethermin, M. S. Bothwell, W. N. Brandt, C. de Breuck, J. E. Carlstrom, S., C. Chapman, B. Gullberg, Y. Hezaveh, K. Litke, M. Malkan, D. P. Marrone, M., McDonald, E. J. Murphy, J. S. Spilker, J. Sreevani

TL;DR
This study uses multi-wavelength observations to show that the galaxy SPT0346-52 at z=5.7 is dominated by intense star formation with negligible active galactic nucleus activity, despite its extremely high luminosity and star formation surface density.
Contribution
First detailed multi-wavelength analysis confirming negligible AGN activity in a hyper-starburst galaxy at high redshift.
Findings
X-ray data shows no significant AGN contribution.
Radio data consistent with star formation, no AGN signature.
Galaxy has one of the highest star formation surface densities known.
Abstract
We present Chandra ACIS-S and ATCA radio continuum observations of the strongly lensed dusty, star-forming galaxy SPT-S J034640-5204.9 (hereafter SPT0346-52) at = 5.656. This galaxy has also been observed with ALMA, HST, Spitzer, Herschel, APEX, and the VLT. Previous observations indicate that if the infrared (IR) emission is driven by star formation, then the inferred lensing-corrected star formation rate ( 4500 yr) and star formation rate surface density ( 2000 ) are both exceptionally high. It remained unclear from the previous data, however, whether a central active galactic nucleus (AGN) contributes appreciably to the IR luminosity. The {\it Chandra} upper limit shows that SPT0346-52 is consistent with being star-formation dominated in the X-ray, and any AGN contribution to the IR emission is…
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