The ALPINE-ALMA [CII] survey: Dust mass budget in the early Universe
F. Pozzi, F. Calura, Y. Fudamoto, M. Dessauges-Zavadsky, C. Gruppioni,, M. Talia, G. Zamorani, M. Bethermin, A. Cimatti, A. Enia, Y. Khusanova, R., Decarli, O. Le Fevre, P. Capak, P. Cassata, A.L. Faisst, L. Yan, D. Schaerer,, J. Silverman, S. Bardelli, M. Boquien, A. Enia

TL;DR
This study uses ALMA observations of high-redshift galaxies to estimate the dust mass density in the early universe, revealing UV-selected galaxies' evolutionary stage and the limitations of UV selection in capturing dust-rich galaxies.
Contribution
First measurement of dust mass density at z~5 for UV-selected galaxies using ALMA data, linking dust content to galaxy evolution models and morphological analysis.
Findings
UV-selected galaxies are likely progenitors of proto-spheroids.
Dust mass density at z~5 is about 30% of that from IR-selected samples.
Most detected galaxies show disturbed morphologies.
Abstract
The dust content of normal galaxies and the dust mass density (DMD) at high-z (z>4) are unconstrained given the source confusion and the sensitivity limitations of previous observations. The ALMA Large Program to INvestigate [CII] at Early Times (ALPINE), which targeted 118 UV-selected star-forming galaxies at 4.4<z<5.9, provides a new opportunity to tackle this issue for the first time with a statistically robust dataset. We have exploited the rest-frame far-infrared (FIR) fluxes of the 23 continuum individually detected galaxies and stacks of continuum images to measure the dust content of the 118 UV-selected ALPINE galaxies. We have focused on the dust scaling relations and, by comparing them with predictions from chemical evolution models, we have probed the evolutionary stage of UV-selected galaxies at high-z. By using the observed correlation between the UV-luminosity and the dust…
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