We report the identification of an extreme proto-cluster of galaxies in the early Universe whose core (nicknamed Dusty Red Core, DRC, because of its very red color in the Herschel SPIRE 250-, 350and 500-µm bands) is formed by at least ten dusty star-forming galaxies (DSFGs), spectroscopically confirmed to lie at z spec = 4.002 via detection of [C i](1-0), 12 CO(6-5), 12 CO(4-3), 12 CO(2-1) and H 2 O(2 11 − 2 02 ) emission lines, detected using ALMA and ATCA. The spectroscopically-confirmed components of the proto-cluster are distributed over a 260 kpc × 310 kpc region and have a collective obscured star-formation rate (SFR) of ∼ 6500 M ⊙ yr −1 , considerably higher than has been seen before in any proto-cluster of galaxies or over-densities of DSFGs at z 4. Most of the star formation is taking place in luminous DSFGs since no Lyα emitters are detected in the proto-cluster core, apart from a Lyα blob located next to one of the DRC dusty components, extending over 60 kpc. The total obscured SFR of the proto-cluster could rise to SFR ∼ 14, 400 M ⊙ yr −1 if all the members of an over-density of bright DSFGs discovered around DRC in a wide-field LABOCA 870-µm image are part of the same structure. [C i](1-0) emission reveals that DRC has a total molecular gas mass of at least M H2 ∼ 6.6 × 10 11 M ⊙ , and its total halo mass could be as high as ∼ 4.4 × 10 13 M ⊙ , indicating that it is the likely progenitor of a cluster at least as massive as Coma at z = 0. The relatively short gas-depletion times of the DRC components suggest either the presence of a mechanism able to trigger extreme star formation simultaneously in galaxies spread over a few hundred kpc or the presence of gas flows from the cosmic web able to sustain star formation over several hundred million years.
We present the IRAM-30 m observations of multiple-J CO (J up mostly from 3 up to 8) and [C I]( 3 P 2 → 3 P 1 ) ([C I](2-1) hereafter) line emission in a sample of redshift ∼ 2-4 submillimeter galaxies (SMGs). These SMGs are selected among the brightest-lensed galaxies discovered in the Herschel-Astrophysical Terahertz Large Area Survey (H-ATLAS). Forty-seven CO lines and 7 [C I](2-1) lines have been detected in 15 lensed SMGs. A non-negligible effect of differential lensing is found for the CO emission lines, which could have caused significant underestimations of the linewidths, and hence of the dynamical masses. The CO spectral line energy distributions (SLEDs), peaking around J up ∼ 5-7, are found to be similar to those of the local starburst-dominated ultra-luminous infrared galaxies and of the previously studied SMGs. After correcting for lensing amplification, we derived the global properties of the bulk of molecular gas in the SMGs using non-LTE radiative transfer modelling, such as the molecular gas density n H 2 ∼ 10 2.5 -10 4.1 cm −3 and the kinetic temperature T k ∼ 20-750 K. The gas thermal pressure P th ranging from ∼ 10 5 K cm −3 to 10 6 K cm −3 is found to be correlated with star formation efficiency. Further decomposing the CO SLEDs into two excitation components, we find a low-excitation component with n H 2 ∼ 10 2.8 -10 4.6 cm −3 and T k ∼ 20-30 K, which is less correlated with star formation, and a high-excitation one (n H 2 ∼ 10 2.7 -10 4.2 cm −3 , T k ∼ 60-400 K) which is tightly related to the on-going star-forming activity. Additionally, tight linear correlations between the far-infrared and CO line luminosities have been confirmed for the J up ≥ 5 CO lines of these SMGs, implying that these CO lines are good tracers of star formation. The [C I](2-1) lines follow the tight linear correlation between the luminosities of the [C I](2-1) and the CO(1-0) line found in local starbursts, indicating that [C I] lines could serve as good total molecular gas mass tracers for high-redshift SMGs as well. The total mass of the molecular gas reservoir, (1-30) × 10 10 M , derived based on the CO(3-2) fluxes and α CO(1-0) = 0.8M ( K km s −1 pc 2 ) −1 , suggests a typical molecular gas depletion time t dep ∼ 20-100 Myr and a gas to dust mass ratio δ GDR ∼ 30-100 with ∼ 20%-60% uncertainty for the SMGs. The ratio between CO line luminosity and the dust mass L CO /M dust appears to be slowly increasing with redshift for high-redshift SMGs, which need to be further confirmed by a more complete SMG sample at various redshifts. Finally, through comparing the linewidth of CO and H 2 O lines, we find that they agree well in almost all our SMGs, confirming that the emitting regions of the CO and H 2 O lines are co-spatially located.
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