Normal, dust-obscured galaxies in the epoch of reionization

Inami, H.; Bowler, R. A. A.; De Looze, I.; Schneider, R.; Oesch, P. A.; Li, Y.; van der Werf, P.; Bouwens, R. J.; Fudamoto, Y.; da Cunha, E.; Riechers, D.; Aravena, M.; Nanayakkara, T.; Ferrara, A.; Smit, R.; Labbe, I.; Stefanon, M.; Schouws, S.; Graziani, L.; Dayal, P.; Endsley, R.; Gonzalez, V.; Barrufet, L.; Pallottini, A.; Hodge, J.; Hutter, A.; Stark, D.; Ucci, G.; White, C.

Switzerland, Japan, Denmark, Netherlands, United Kingdom, United States, Chile, Australia, Italy, Belgium

Abstract

Over the past decades, rest-frame ultraviolet (UV) observations have provided large samples of UV luminous galaxies at redshift (z) greater than 6 (refs. 1-3), during the so-called epoch of reionization. While a few of these UV-identified galaxies revealed substantial dust reservoirs4-7, very heavily dust-obscured sources at these early times have remained elusive. They are limited to a rare population of extreme starburst galaxies8-12 and companions of rare quasars13,14. These studies conclude that the contribution of dust-obscured galaxies to the cosmic star formation rate density at z > 6 is sub-dominant. Recent ALMA and Spitzer observations have identified a more abundant, less extreme population of obscured galaxies at z = 3−6 (refs. 15,16). However, this population has not been confirmed in the reionization epoch so far. Here, we report the discovery of two dust-obscured star-forming galaxies at z = 6.6813 ± 0.0005 and z = 7.3521 ± 0.0005. These objects are not detected in existing rest-frame UV data and were discovered only through their far-infrared [C II] lines and dust continuum emission as companions to typical UV-luminous galaxies at the same redshift. The two galaxies exhibit lower infrared luminosities and star-formation rates than extreme starbursts, in line with typical star-forming galaxies at z ≈ 7. This population of heavily dust-obscured galaxies appears to contribute 10-25% to the z > 6 cosmic star formation rate density.

2021 Nature
eHST 116