ALESS--JWST: Dust-driven Morphologies and Hidden Stellar Mass in $z\sim3$ Sub-millimeter Galaxies
J. Li, E. da Cunha, J. A. Hodge, I. Smail, S. Kendrew + 15 more
TLDR
JWST observations of z~3 sub-millimeter galaxies reveal dust-driven morphologies and a significant bias in stellar mass estimates due to spatially varying dust obscuration.
Key contributions
- JWST/ALMA data reveal a "dust-obscuration bias" in z~3 SMGs, causing integrated fits to miss hidden stellar mass.
- SMG morphologies are wavelength-dependent; central dust obscuration inflates sizes and creates stellar-dust offsets.
- MIRI imaging shows compact stellar structures matching dust continuum, less affected by dust than NIRCam.
- Consistent intrinsic stellar mass and dust continuum sizes suggest compact, obscured star formation builds dense stellar cores.
Why it matters
This paper highlights critical biases in stellar mass and morphological estimates of high-redshift galaxies, emphasizing the need for multi-wavelength JWST data. It suggests that dust obscuration significantly impacts our understanding of galaxy evolution, particularly for massive star-forming systems.
Original Abstract
We present JWST/NIRCam and MIRI observations of twelve $z\sim3$ sub-millimeter galaxies (SMGs) from the ALESS survey, combined with high-resolution ($0.08''-0.16''$) ALMA 870$μ$m imaging, enabling spatially resolved SED fitting on $\sim$kpc scales. We find a resolved star-forming main sequence linking surface densities of star formation rate and stellar mass, suggesting star formation remains tightly coupled to local mass distribution even in obscured systems. Our resolved SED analysis reveals a systematic stellar mass bias in integrated fits, even including rest-frame $\sim2μ$m MIRI imaging. Rather than classical `outshining', this is mainly driven by spatially varying dust attenuation, indicating a `dust-obscuration bias' that causes obscured stellar mass to be missed. We show SMG morphologies are wavelength-dependent. At rest-frame optical wavelengths, central obscuration produces stellar-dust offsets and inflated sizes, while at longer wavelengths these effects diminish. The rest-frame $\sim1.5-3μ$m MIRI imaging is less affected by dust than NIRCam and reveals compact stellar structures matching the 870$μ$m dust continuum. We find centrally concentrated dust attenuation drives both offsets and size variations, demonstrating dust geometry is the main driver of structural diversity. Consequently, morphologies from rest-frame wavelengths $\lesssim1.6μ$m can be biased without longer-wavelength constraints. The intrinsic stellar mass and dust continuum sizes are consistent ($R_\mathrm{e,870μm}/R_\mathrm{e,\ast}=1.0\pm0.4$), supporting a picture in which SMGs host compact, obscured star formation that builds dense stellar cores, consistent with evolution into massive quiescent galaxies. We suggest such obscured structures and associated biases may also be common among massive star-forming galaxies at $z\gtrsim1$, implying these effects are likely of broad relevance.
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