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JWST’s PEARLS: A JWST/NIRCam View of ALMA Sources

Authors :
Cheng Cheng
Jia-Sheng Huang
Ian Smail
Haojing Yan
Seth H. Cohen
Rolf A. Jansen
Rogier A. Windhorst
Zhiyuan Ma
Anton Koekemoer
Christopher N. A. Willmer
S. P. Willner
Jose M. Diego
Brenda Frye
Christopher J. Conselice
Leonardo Ferreira
Andreea Petric
Min Yun
Hansung B. Gim
Maria del Carmen Polletta
Kenneth J. Duncan
Benne W. Holwerda
Huub J. A. Röttgering
Rachel Honor
Nimish P. Hathi
Patrick S. Kamieneski
Nathan J. Adams
Dan Coe
Tom Broadhurst
Jake Summers
Scott Tompkins
Simon P. Driver
Norman A. Grogin
Madeline A. Marshall
Nor Pirzkal
Aaron Robotham
Russell E. Ryan
Source :
The Astrophysical Journal Letters, 2023, Vol.942(1), pp.L19 [Peer Reviewed Journal]
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
IOP Publishing, 2023.

Abstract

We report the results of James Webb Space Telescope/NIRCam observations of 19 (sub)millimeter (submm/mm) sources detected by the Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA). The accurate ALMA positions allowed unambiguous identifications of their NIRCam counterparts. Taking gravitational lensing into account, these represent 16 distinct galaxies in three fields and constitute the largest sample of its kind to date. The counterparts' spectral energy distributions from rest-frame ultraviolet to near infrared provide photometric redshifts ($110^{10.5}$ Msol), which are similar to sub-millimeter galaxy (SMG) hosts studied previously. However, our sample is fainter in submm/mm than the classic SMG samples are, and our sources exhibit a wider range of properties. They have dust-embedded star-formation rates as low as 10 Msol yr$^{-1}$, and the sources populate both the star-forming main sequence and the quiescent categories. The deep NIRCam data allow us to study the rest-frame near-IR morphologies. Excluding two multiply imaged systems and one quasar, the majority of the remaining sources are disk-like and show either little or no disturbance. This suggests that secular growth is a potential route for the assembly of high-mass disk galaxies. While a few hosts have large disks, the majority have small disks (median half-mass radius of 1.6 kpc). At this time, it is unclear whether this is due to the prevalence of small disks at these redshifts or some unknown selection effects of deep ALMA observations. A larger sample of ALMA sources with NIRCam observations will be able to address this question.<br />Comment: 19 pages, 11 figures, accepted by ApJL

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Astrophysical Journal Letters, 2023, Vol.942(1), pp.L19 [Peer Reviewed Journal]
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2d65246d1a328dfed17f8fbaf0142ea9