A PAH deficit in the starburst core of a distant spiral galaxy
Zhaoxuan Liu, John D. Silverman, Emanuele Daddi, Boris S. Kalita, Annagrazia Puglisi, Qinyue Fei, Alvio Renzini, Daichi Kashino, Francesco Valentino, Jeyhan S. Kartaltepe, Daizhong Liu, Pablo G. P\'erez-Gonz\'alez, Jed McKinney, Caitlin M. Casey, Xuheng Ding, Andreas Faisst

TL;DR
This study uses JWST and ALMA to analyze a distant starburst galaxy, revealing a PAH deficit in the nucleus likely caused by intense radiation, and demonstrating that starburst activity can occur without major mergers.
Contribution
First spatially-resolved detection of PAH deficit in a high-redshift starburst galaxy, linking ISM physics to galaxy morphology and star formation activity.
Findings
PAH emission is significantly reduced in the galaxy's nucleus.
Starburst activity occurs without evidence of a major merger.
Spatial variations in IR and PAH emission ratios are observed at z>1.
Abstract
We present high-resolution and spatially-matched observations with JWST and ALMA of a starburst galaxy (PACS-830) at . The NIRCam observations mainly trace the stellar light while the CO (=5--4) observations map the dense molecular gas at kpc scales. Both datasets reveal the morphology to be that of a gas/dust rich bulge with two extending arms, together resembling a grand-design spiral galaxy. The more pronounced arm contributes 21 6\% of the total CO emission. These results demonstrate that starburst activity at high redshift can be triggered, without undergoing a highly disruptive major merger. We assess the strength and distribution of star formation using two tracers: (1) Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons (PAHs) emission detected at m () with a MIRI/F1800W image, and (2) , inferred from the CO (=5--4) map. The spatial profiles of the…
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