Candidate cosmic filament in the GJ526 field, mapped with the NIKA2 camera
J.-F. Lestrade (1), F.-X. Desert (2), G. Lagache (3), R. Adam (4), P., Ade (5), H. Ajeddig (6), P. Andre (6), E. Artis (9), H. Aussel (6), A. Beelen, (3), A. Benoit (7), S. Berta (8), M. Bethermin (3), L. Bing (3), O. Bourrion, (9), M. Calvo (7), A. Catalano (9), A. Coulais (1)

TL;DR
This study used the NIKA2 millimetre camera to map a field around GJ526, discovering a filament-like structure of dust-obscured star-forming galaxies at redshift 2.5, potentially tracing a cosmic web filament in the distant universe.
Contribution
First detection of a candidate cosmic filament composed of SMGs at redshift 2.5 using millimetre observations, linking observations to cosmological simulations.
Findings
Identified seven SMGs along a filament-like structure.
Spectral energy distributions consistent with redshift 2.5 for all sources.
Filament length estimated at at least 4 cMpc, with source separations matching simulations.
Abstract
Distinctive large-scale structures have been identified in the spatial distribution of optical galaxies up to redshift z ~ 1. In the more distant universe, the relationship between the dust-obscured population of star-forming galaxies observed at millimetre wavelengths and the network of cosmic filaments of dark matter apparent in all cosmological hydrodynamical simulations is still under study. Using the NIKA2 dual-band millimetre camera, we mapped a field of ~ 90 arcminutes^2 in the direction of the star GJ526 simultaneously in its 1.15-mm and 2.0-mm continuum wavebands to investigate the nature of the quasi-alignment of five sources found ten years earlier with the MAMBO camera at 1.2 mm. We find that these sources are not clumps of a circumstellar debris disc around this star as initially hypothesized. Rather, they must be dust-obscured star-forming galaxies, or sub-millimetre…
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.
