A SCUBA-2 Selected Herschel-SPIRE Dropout and the Nature of this Population
J. Greenslade, E. Aguilar, D. L. Clements, H. Dannerbauer, T. Cheng,, G. Petitpas, C. Yang, H. Messias, I. Oteo, D. Farrah, M.J. Michalowski, I., Perez Fournon, I. Aretxaga, M. S. Yun, S. Eales, L. Dunne, A. Cooray, P., Andreani, D. H. Hughes, M. Velazquez, D. Sanchez-Arguelles

TL;DR
This study investigates a mysterious high-redshift dusty galaxy detected at submillimeter wavelengths, revealing its properties and discussing its significance in the context of early galaxy formation.
Contribution
It presents detailed observations and analysis of a Herschel-SPIRE dropout galaxy, highlighting its potential as a high-redshift ULIRG and its role in the submillimeter galaxy population.
Findings
NGP6_D1 is likely a $z=5.8$ to 8.3$ ULIRG.
It accounts for about 20% of SCUBA-2 detected sources.
No spectroscopic redshift was confirmed despite deep observations.
Abstract
Dusty star-forming galaxies (DSFGs) detected at provide important examples of the first generations of massive galaxies. However, few examples with spectroscopic confirmation are currently known, with Hershel struggling to detect significant numbers of DSFGs. NGP6_D1 is a bright 850 source (12.3 2.5 mJy) with no counterparts at shorter wavelengths (a SPIRE dropout). Interferometric observations confirm it is a single source, with no evidence for any optical or NIR emission, or nearby likely foreground lensing sources. No detected lines are seen in both LMT RSR and IRAM 30m EMIR spectra of NGP6_D1 across 32 of bandwidth despite reaching detection limits of , so the redshift remains unknown. Template fitting suggests that NGP6_D1 is most likely between and 8.3. SED analysis finds that NGP6_D1 is a ULIRG,…
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