Revealing the hidden cosmic feast: A z=4.3 galaxy group hosting two optically dark, efficiently star-forming galaxies
Malte Brinch, Shuowen Jin, Raphael Gobat, Nikolaj B. Sillassen, Hiddo, Algera, Steven Gillman, Thomas R. Greve, Carlos Gomez-Guijarro, Bitten, Gullberg, Jacqueline Hodge, Minju Lee, Daizhong Liu, Georgios Magdis,, Francesco Valentino

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and analysis of a high-redshift galaxy group at z=4.3, hosting two optically dark, highly star-forming galaxies with detailed molecular and dust observations indicating intense star formation and early quenching signs.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed multi-wavelength characterization of a compact galaxy group at z=4.3, revealing the properties of its star-forming galaxies and their potential to form a massive galaxy cluster.
Findings
The group has a total star formation rate of ~2000 M_sun/yr.
The galaxies exhibit high gas temperatures and densities, close to thermalization.
Gas depletion times are extremely short, indicating imminent quenching.
Abstract
We present the confirmation of a compact galaxy group candidate, CGG-z4, at in the COSMOS field. This structure was identified by two spectroscopically confirmed -dropout galaxies with ALMA and 3 mm continuum detections, surrounded by an overdensity of NIR-detected galaxies with consistent photometric redshifts of . The two ALMA sources, CGG-z4.a and CGG-z4.b, are detected with both CO(4-3) and CO(5-4) lines. [CI](1-0) is detected on CGG-z4.a, and HO() absorption is detected on CGG-z4.b. We model an integrated spectral energy distribution by combining the FIR-to-radio photometry of this group and estimate a total star formation rate of yr, making it one of the most star-forming groups known at . Their high CO(5-4)/CO(4-3) ratios indicate that the inter-stellar mediums (ISMs) are…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
