Starbursts in and out of the star-formation main sequence
David Elbaz, Roger Leiton, Neil Nagar, Koryo Okumura, Maximilien, Franco, Corentin Schreiber, Maurilio Pannella, Tao Wang, Mark Dickinson,, Tanio Diaz-Santos, Laure Ciesla, Emanuele Daddi, Frederic Bournaud, Georgios, Magdis, Luwenjia Zhou, Wiphu Rujopakarn

TL;DR
This study uses ALMA high-resolution imaging to analyze star formation surface densities in z~2 galaxies, revealing dense central starbursts, different regimes of starburst activity, and the role of AGN in these processes.
Contribution
It identifies two distinct starburst regimes in high-redshift galaxies and highlights the importance of spatially resolved data for understanding star formation.
Findings
Dense star-forming regions are centrally located in galaxies.
Two starburst regimes: above main sequence with high gas fractions, within scatter with compact star formation.
Starbursts within the main sequence often host active galactic nuclei.
Abstract
We use high-resolution continuum images obtained at 870microns with the Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA) to probe the surface density of star-formation in z~2 galaxies and study the different physical properties between galaxies within and above the star-formation main sequence of galaxies. This sample of eight star-forming galaxies at z~2 selected among the most massive Herschel galaxies in the GOODS-South field is supplemented with eleven galaxies from the public data of the 1.3 mm survey of the Hubble Ultra-Deep Field. ALMA reveals systematically dense concentrations of dusty star-formation close to the center of the stellar component of the galaxies. We identify two different starburst regimes: (i) the classical population of starbursts located above the SFR-M* main sequence, with enhanced gas fractions and short depletion times and (ii) a sub-population of galaxies located…
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