2009ApJ...697L.122C -
Astrophys. J., 697, L122-L126 (2009/June-1)
An accurate position for HDF 850.1: the brightest submillimeter source in the Hubble Deep Field-North.
COWIE L.L., BARGER A.J., WANG W.-H. and WILLIAMS J.P.
Abstract (from CDS):
We report a highly significant Submillimeter Array (SMA) detection of the prototypical submillimeter source HDF 850.1, which is the brightest submillimeter source in the Hubble Deep Field-North proper. The detection yields an extremely precise position of R.A.(2000) = 12h36m51.s99 and Decl.(2000) = +62°12'25".83 with a 1σ positional uncertainty of 0".17. The position is consistent with the location of a millimeter wavelength interferometric detection and with the locations of weak Very Large Array detections at 1.4 and 8.4 GHz, but it is not consistent with any previous optical/near-infrared identifications. The source appears point-like at the 2'' resolution of the SMA, and the detected flux of 7.8±1.0 mJy is consistent with the measured Submillimeter Common-User Bolometer Array (SCUBA) fluxes. We tabulate fluxes and limits on HDF 850.1 at other wavelengths. Our redshift estimate for HDF 850.1 based on the radio through mid-infrared measurements is z = 4.1+0.5–0.6. The faintness of the source at optical/near-infrared wavelengths and the high estimated redshift suggest that HDF 850.1 may be an analog of the brighter submillimeter source GOODS 850-5, which is also thought to be at z > 4. The fact that a source like HDF 850.1 should have appeared in one of the very first blank-field SCUBA observations ever made suggests that such high-redshift sources are quite common. Thus, we are led to conclude that high-redshift star formation is dominated by giant dusty star-forming galaxies, just as it is at lower redshifts.
Abstract Copyright:
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Journal keyword(s):
cosmology: observations - galaxies: evolution - galaxies: formation - galaxies: starburst - infrared: galaxies
Simbad objects:
12
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