IR SED and Dust Masses of Sub-solar Metallicity Galaxies at z~2.3
Irene Shivaei, Gerg\"o Popping, George Rieke, Naveen Reddy, Alexandra, Pope, Robert Kennicutt, Bahram Mobasher, Alison Coil, Yoshinobu Fudamoto,, Mariska Kriek, Jianwei Lyu, Pascal Oesch, Ryan Sanders, Alice Shapley, Brian, Siana

TL;DR
This study uses ALMA and other infrared data to analyze the IR spectral energy distribution and dust properties of subsolar metallicity galaxies at z~2.3, revealing differences from local galaxy templates and implications for dust and star formation estimates.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed IR SED analysis of high-redshift subsolar metallicity galaxies, highlighting the inadequacy of local galaxy templates for this population.
Findings
High-redshift subsolar metallicity galaxies have broader, hotter IR SEDs than local templates.
The obscured star formation fraction in these galaxies is lower than in local LIRGs.
Dust masses at z~2.3 are significantly higher than in local galaxies of similar metallicity.
Abstract
We present results from ALMA 1.2mm continuum observations of a sample of 27 star-forming galaxies at z=2.1-2.5 from the MOSFIRE Deep Evolution Field (MOSDEF) survey. These galaxies have gas-phase metallicity and star-formation rate measurements from Hb, [OIII], Ha, and [NII]. Using stacks of Spitzer, Herschel, and ALMA photometry (rest-frame ~ 8-400m), we examine the IR SED of high-redshift subsolar metallicity (~0.5 ) LIRGs. We find that the data agree well with an average SED template of higher luminosity local low-metallicity dwarf galaxies (reduced of 1.8). When compared with the commonly used templates for solar-metallicity local galaxies or high-redshift LIRGs and ULIRGs, even in the most favorable case (with reduced of 2.8), the templates are rejected at >98% confidence level. The broader and hotter IR SED of both the local dwarfs and…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
