학술논문

The discovery of the most UV–Ly α luminous star-forming galaxy: a young, dust- and metal-poor starburst with QSO-like luminosities.
Document Type
Article
Source
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society: Letters. Nov2020, Vol. 499 Issue 1, pL105-L110. 6p.
Subject
*STELLAR mass
*STARBURSTS
*GALACTIC redshift
*ACTIVE galactic nuclei
*STAR formation
*GALAXIES
*GRAVITATIONAL lenses
*LUMINOSITY
Language
ISSN
1745-3925
Abstract
We report the discovery of BOSS-EUVLG1 at z  = 2.469, by far the most luminous, almost un-obscured star-forming galaxy known at any redshift. First classified as a QSO within the Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey, follow-up observations with the Gran Telescopio Canarias reveal that its large luminosity, M UV ≃ −24.40 and log(L Lyα/erg s–1) ≃ 44.0, is due to an intense burst of star formation, and not to an active galactic nucleus or gravitational lensing. BOSS-EUVLG1 is a compact (r eff ≃ 1.2 kpc), young (4–5 Myr) starburst with a stellar mass log(M */M⊙) = 10.0 ± 0.1 and a prodigious star formation rate of ≃1000 M⊙ yr−1. However, it is metal- and dust-poor [12 + log(O/H) = 8.13 ± 0.19, E (B – V) ≃ 0.07, log(L IR/ L UV) < −1.2], indicating that we are witnessing the very early phase of an intense starburst that has had no time to enrich the ISM. BOSS-EUVLG1 might represent a short-lived (<100 Myr), yet important phase of star-forming galaxies at high redshift that has been missed in previous surveys. Within a galaxy evolutionary scheme, BOSS-EUVLG1 could likely represent the very initial phases in the evolution of massive quiescent galaxies, even before the dusty star-forming phase. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]