A Diverse Population of z ~ 2 ULIRGs Revealed by JWST Imaging [GA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/2304.01378


Four ultra-luminous infrared galaxies (ULIRGs) observed with JWST/NIRcam in the Cosmos Evolution Early Release Science program offer an unbiased preview of the $z\approx2$ ULIRG population. The objects were originally selected at 24 $\mu$m and have strong polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon emission features observed with Spitzer/IRS. The four objects have similar stellar masses of ${\sim}10^{11}$ M$_\odot$ but otherwise are quite diverse. One is an isolated disk galaxy, but it has an active nucleus as shown by X-ray observations and by a bright point-source nucleus. Two others are merging pairs with mass ratios of 6-7:1. One has active nuclei in both components, while the other has only one active nucleus: the one in the less-massive neighbor, not the ULIRG. The fourth object is clumpy and irregular and is probably a merger, but there is no sign of an active nucleus. The intrinsic spectral energy distributions for the four AGNs in these systems are typical of type-2 QSOs. This study is consistent with the idea that even if internal processes can produce large luminosities at $z\sim2$, galaxy merging may still be necessary for the most luminous objects. The diversity of these four initial examples suggests that large samples will be needed to understand the $z\approx2$ ULIRG population.

Read this paper on arXiv…

J. Huang, Z. Li, C. Cheng, et. al.
Wed, 5 Apr 23
9/62

Comments: 9 pages, 3 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in ApJ