Unveiling dust, molecular gas, and high star formation efficiency in extremely UV bright star-forming galaxies at $z\sim 2.1-3.6$
M. Dessauges-Zavadsky, R. Marques-Chaves, D. Schaerer, M.-Y. Xiao, L., Colina, J. Alvarez-Marquez, I. P\'erez-Fournon

TL;DR
This study investigates extremely UV-bright starburst galaxies at redshifts 2.1-3.6, revealing their high star formation efficiency, large molecular gas content, and rapid stellar mass build-up, suggesting they are in an early, intense phase of galaxy formation.
Contribution
It provides detailed ALMA and VLT observations of a rare class of galaxies, highlighting their exceptional star formation efficiency and gas properties, and supports a feedback-free starburst formation model.
Findings
High molecular gas fractions (~82%) in the galaxies.
Short gas depletion timescales (<13 to 71 Myr).
Evidence for rapid, efficient star formation at galaxy formation onset.
Abstract
We analysed ALMA FIR (1.3 mm) dust continuum and CO emission of 12 starburst galaxies at , selected for their extreme brightness in the rest-UV with to . We also analysed VLT HAWK-I - and -band images. The galaxies are characterised by negligible dust attenuations with blue UV spectral slopes ( to ), very young stellar populations of Myr, and powerful starbursts with a high mean specific star formation rate of , placing them ~dex above the main sequence at similar redshifts and stellar masses (). The FIR dust continuum emission revealed in 9 galaxies yields IR luminosities of and large dust masses barely produced by SNe within the 10~Myr timescale. The CO emission detected in 8 galaxies…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
