The Galaxies Missed by Hubble and ALMA: The Contribution of Extremely Red Galaxies to the Cosmic Census at 3 < z < 8
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Author
Williams, Christina C.
Alberts, Stacey
Ji, Zhiyuan
Hainline, Kevin N.
Lyu, Jianwei
Rieke, George
Endsley, Ryan
Suess, Katherine A.
Sun, Fengwu
Johnson, Benjamin D.
Florian, Michael
Shivaei, Irene
Rujopakarn, Wiphu
Baker, William M.
Bhatawdekar, Rachana
Boyett, Kristan
Bunker, Andrew J.
Cameron, Alex J.
Carniani, Stefano
Charlot, Stephane
Curtis-Lake, Emma
DeCoursey, Christa
de Graaff, Anna
Egami, Eiichi
Eisenstein, Daniel J.
Gibson, Justus L.
Hausen, Ryan
Helton, Jakob M.
Maiolino, Roberto
Maseda, Michael V.
Nelson, Erica J.
Pérez-González, Pablo G.
Rieke, Marcia J.
Robertson, Brant E.
Saxena, Aayush
Tacchella, Sandro
Willmer, Christopher N. A.
Willott, Chris J.
Attention
2299/27952
Abstract
Using deep JWST imaging from JADES, JEMS, and SMILES, we characterize optically faint and extremely red galaxies at z > 3 that were previously missing from galaxy census estimates. The data indicate the existence of abundant, dusty, and poststarburst-like galaxies down to 10 8 M ⊙, below the sensitivity limit of Spitzer and the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA). Modeling the NIRCam and Hubble Space Telescope (HST) photometry of these red sources can result in extremely high values for both stellar mass and star formation rate (SFR); however, including seven MIRI filters out to 21 μm results in decreased masses (median 0.6 dex for log 10 ( M ∗ / M ⊙ ) > 10) and SFRs (median 10× for SFR > 100 M ⊙ yr −1). At z > 6, our sample includes a high fraction of “little red dots” (LRDs; NIRCam-selected dust-reddened active galactic nucleus (AGN) candidates). We significantly measure older stellar populations in the LRDs out to rest-frame 3 μm (the stellar bump) and rule out a dominant contribution from hot dust emission, a signature of AGN contamination to stellar population measurements. This allows us to measure their contribution to the cosmic census at z > 3, below the typical detection limits of ALMA (L IR < 10 12 L ⊙). We find that these sources, which are overwhelmingly missed by HST and ALMA, could effectively double the obscured fraction of the star formation rate density at 4 < z < 6 compared to some estimates, showing that prior to JWST, the obscured contribution from fainter sources could be underestimated. Finally, we identify five sources with evidence for Balmer breaks and high stellar masses at 5.5 < z < 7.7. While spectroscopy is required to determine their nature, we discuss possible measurement systematics to explore with future data.
Publication date
2024-06-06Published in
The Astrophysical JournalPublished version
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ad3f17Other links
http://hdl.handle.net/2299/27952Metadata
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