Characterizing the contribution of dust-obscured star formation at $z \gtrsim$ 5 using 18 serendipitously identified [CII] emitters
I. F. van Leeuwen, R. J. Bouwens, P. P. van der Werf, J. A. Hodge, S., Schouws, M. Stefanon, H. S. B. Algera, M. Aravena, L. A. Boogaard, R. A .A., Bowler, E. da Cunha, P. Dayal, R. Decarli, V. Gonzalez, H. Inami, I. de, Looze, L. Sommovigo, B. P. Venemans, F. Walter, L.Barrufet

TL;DR
This study introduces a [CII]-based method to quantify dust-obscured star formation at high redshifts, revealing significant obscuration fractions and their impact on the cosmic star formation rate density at z > 5.
Contribution
It presents a novel [CII] emission selection technique to measure dust-obscured star formation, reducing bias compared to UV-based methods at z > 5.
Findings
Approximately 63% of star formation is obscured around star-forming galaxies.
Around QSOs, about 93% of star formation is obscured.
Obscured star formation contributes over 3% at z~5 and over 10% at z~6 to the total SFRD.
Abstract
We present a new method to determine the star formation rate (SFR) density of the Universe at that includes the contribution of dust-obscured star formation. For this purpose, we use a [CII] (158 m) selected sample of galaxies serendipitously identified in the fields of known objects to characterize the fraction of obscured SFR. The advantage of a [CII] selection is that our sample is SFR-selected, in contrast to a UV-selection that would be biased towards unobscured star formation. We obtain a sample of 23 [CII] emitters near star-forming (SF) galaxies and QSOs -- three of which we identify for the first time -- using previous literature and archival ALMA data. 18 of these serendipitously identified galaxies have sufficiently deep rest-UV data and are used to characterize the obscured fraction of the star formation in galaxies with SFRs $\gtrsim 30\…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
