The ALMA-CRISTAL survey: Dust temperature and physical conditions of the interstellar medium in a typical galaxy at z=5.66
V. Villanueva, R. Herrera-Camus, J. Gonzalez-Lopez, M. Aravena, R. J., Assef, Mauricio Baeza-Garay, L. Barcos-Mu\~noz, S. Bovino, R. A. A. Bowler,, E. da Cunha, I. De Looze, T. Diaz-Santos, A. Ferrara, N. Foerster-Schreiber,, H. Algera, R. Iked, M. Killi, I. Mitsuhashi, T. Naab

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution ALMA observations to analyze the dust temperature and ISM conditions in a typical galaxy at z=5.66, revealing complex structures and variations in physical conditions among components.
Contribution
First detailed multi-component dust and ISM analysis of a z=5.66 galaxy with high-resolution ALMA data, constraining dust temperature and radiation field effects.
Findings
HZ10-W has a dust temperature of ~51.2 K, higher than other components.
The uncertainties in global dust temperature measurements are reduced by a factor of 2.3.
HZ10-W shows a lower [CII]/FIR ratio, indicating a harder radiation field.
Abstract
We present new m dust continuum observations from the ALMA of HZ10 (CRISTAL-22), a dusty main-sequence galaxy at =5.66 as part of the [CII] Resolved Ism in STar-forming Alma Large program, CRISTAL. The high angular resolution of the ALMA Band 7 and new Band 9 data() reveals the complex structure of HZ10, which comprises two main components (HZ10-C and HZ10-W) and a bridge-like dusty emission between them (the Bridge). We model the dust spectral energy distribution (SED) to constrain the physical conditions of the interstellar medium (ISM) and its variations among the different components identified in HZ10. We find that HZ10-W (the more UV-obscured component) has an SED dust temperature of 51.2 K; this is 5 K higher (although still consistent) than that of the central component and previous global estimations…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
