SCUBADive II: Searching for $z>4$ Dust-Obscured Galaxies via F150W-Dropouts in COSMOS-Web
Sinclaire M. Manning, Jed McKinney, Katherine E. Whitaker, Arianna S. Long, Olivia R. Cooper, Caitlin M. Casey, Rafael C. Arango-Toro, Jaclyn B. Champagne, Nicole E. Drakos, Andreas L. Faisst, Maximilien Franco, Ghassem Gozaliasl, Santosh Harish, Hossein Hatamnia

TL;DR
This study uses JWST data to identify and analyze dust-obscured galaxies at redshifts greater than 4, revealing their significant contribution to the early universe's stellar mass and star formation activity.
Contribution
It presents a new systematic approach to find high-redshift dusty galaxies using F150W-dropouts and combines JWST with (sub-)millimeter observations, expanding understanding of obscured galaxy populations.
Findings
Heavily obscured galaxies make up over 20% of high-redshift galaxies.
These galaxies have high star formation rates and large stellar masses.
Obscured galaxies could contribute up to 60% to the stellar mass at z>4.
Abstract
The relative fraction of obscured galaxies at compared to lower redshifts remains highly uncertain as accurate bookkeeping of the dust-obscured component proves difficult. We address this shortcoming with SCUBADive, a compilation of the JWST counterparts of (sub-)millimeter galaxies in COSMOS-Web, in order to further analyze the distribution and properties of massive dust-obscured galaxies at early times. In this paper, we present a subset of SCUBADive, focusing on 60 ``dark'' galaxies that dropout at 1.5\micron. Motivated by JWST observations of AzTECC71, a far-infrared bright F150W-dropout with , we complete a systematic search of F150W-dropouts with SCUBA-2 and ALMA detections to find more candidate high redshift dusty galaxies. Within our subsample, 16 are most similar to AzTECC71 due to fainter F444W magnitudes (\,mag) and lack of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Scientific Computing and Data Management
