ALMA reveals a dust-obscured galaxy merger at Cosmic Noon
I. Langan, G. Popping, M. Ginolfi, F. Gentile, F. Valentino, M., Kaasinen

TL;DR
This study uses ALMA observations to identify and analyze a dust-obscured galaxy merger at z=1.17, revealing detailed properties of the merging galaxies that are often missed in optical surveys due to dust obscuration.
Contribution
First detailed ALMA-based analysis of a dust-obscured galaxy merger, demonstrating the effectiveness of submillimeter observations in revealing obscured mergers and their properties.
Findings
Only one galaxy is highly dust-obscured
Both galaxies are massive and highly star-forming
The merger has a positive impact on galaxy properties
Abstract
Galaxy mergers play a critical role in galaxy evolution - altering the size, morphology, dynamics and composition of galaxies. So far, galaxy mergers have mostly been identified through visual inspection of their rest-frame optical and NIR emission. But, dust can obscure this emission, resulting in the misclassification of mergers as single galaxies, and the incorrect interpretation of their baryonic properties. Having serendipitously discovered a dust-obscured galaxy merger at z = 1.17, we aim to determine the baryonic properties of the two merging galaxies, including the star formation rate, and stellar, molecular gas, and dust masses. Using Band 3 and 6 observations from the Atacama Large Millimeter and submillimeter Array (ALMA), and ancillary data, we study the morphology of this previously misclassified merger. We deblend the emission, derive the gas masses from CO observations,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research
