Millimeter mapping at z~1: dust-obscured bulge building and disk growth
Erica J. Nelson, Ken-ichi Tadaki, Linda J. Tacconi, Dieter Lutz,, Natascha M. Forster Schreiber, Anna Cibinel, Stijn Wuyts, Philipp Lang,, Mireia Montes, Pascal A. Oesch, Sirio Belli, Rebecca L. Davies, Richard I., Davies, Reinhard Genzel, Magdalena Lippa, Sedona H. Price

TL;DR
This study maps dust-obscured star formation at z=1.25 in a galaxy similar to Andromeda, revealing simultaneous bulge and disk growth driven by dust-enshrouded processes, with implications for galaxy structural evolution.
Contribution
First detailed millimeter dust continuum mapping of a z~1 galaxy showing bulge growth via dust-obscured star formation, combining multi-wavelength data for structural analysis.
Findings
Dust emission is centrally concentrated, indicating bulge growth.
Bulge and disk are building simultaneously at z=1.25.
Galaxy size and density evolution can be explained by star formation driven processes.
Abstract
A randomly chosen star in today's Universe is most likely to live in a galaxy with a stellar mass between that of the Milky Way and Andromeda. Yet it remains uncertain how the structural evolution of these bulge-disk systems proceeded. Most of the unobscured star formation we observe building Andromdeda progenitors at 0.7<z<1.5 occurs in disks, but >90% of their star formation is reprocessed by dust and remains unaccounted for. Here we map 500micron dust continuum emission in an Andromeda progenitor at z=1.25 to probe where it is growing through dust-obscured star formation. Combining resolved dust measurements from the NOEMA interferometer with Hubble Space Telescope Halpha maps and multicolor imaging (including new UV data from the HDUV survey), we find a bulge growing by dust-obscured star formation: while the unobscured star formation is centrally suppressed, the dust continuum is…
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