4.6 Article

Chaotic and Clumpy Galaxy Formation in an Extremely Massive Reionization-era Halo

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL LETTERS
Volume 929, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.3847/2041-8213/ac61e6

Keywords

High-redshift galaxies; Starburst galaxies

Funding

  1. NASA Hubble Fellowship by the Space Telescope Science Institute [HF2-51446]
  2. NASA [yNAS5-26555]
  3. FONDECYT [1211951]
  4. CONICYT + PCI + INSTITUTO MAX PLANCK DE ASTRONOMIA [MPG190030]
  5. CONICYT+PCI+REDES [190194]
  6. ANID BASAL project [FB210003]
  7. US NSF [AST-1715213, AST-1716127]
  8. NSF [AST-1909153]

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The SPT 0311-58 system at z = 6.900 is an extremely massive structure within the reionization epoch. Our observations using the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array provide detailed views of the dust continuum and [C II] 158 mu m emission in the central pair of galaxies. We speculate that gravitational interactions and fragmentation from massive parent disks have likely played a role in the overall dynamics and formation of clumps in the system.
The SPT 0311-58 system at z = 6.900 is an extremely massive structure within the reionization epoch and offers a chance to understand the formation of galaxies at an extreme peak in the primordial density field. We present 70 mas Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array observations of the dust continuum and [C II] 158 mu m emission in the central pair of galaxies and reach physical resolutions of similar to 100-350 pc, among the most detailed views of any reionization-era system to date. The observations resolve the source into at least a dozen kiloparsecsize clumps. The global kinematics and high turbulent velocity dispersion within the galaxies present a striking contrast to recent claims of dynamically cold thin-disk kinematics in some dusty galaxies just 800 Myr later at z similar to 4. We speculate that both gravitational interactions and fragmentation from massive parent disks have likely played a role in the overall dynamics and formation of clumps in the system. Each clump individually is comparable in mass to other 6 < z < 8 galaxies identified in rest-UV/optical deep field surveys, but with star formation rates elevated by a factor of similar to 3-5. Internally, the clumps themselves bear close resemblance to greatly scaled-up versions of virialized cloud-scale structures identified in low-redshift galaxies. Our observations are qualitatively similar to the chaotic and clumpy assembly within massive halos seen in simulations of high-redshift galaxies.

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