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American Astronomical Society, Astrophysical Journal Letters, 1(931), p. L7, 2022

DOI: 10.3847/2041-8213/ac63b0

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Looking at the Distant Universe with the MeerKAT Array: Discovery of a Luminous OH Megamaser at z > 0.5

Journal article published in 2022 by Marcin Glowacki ORCID, Jordan D. Collier ORCID, Amir Kazemi-Moridani ORCID, Bradley Frank ORCID, Hayley Roberts ORCID, Jeremy Darling ORCID, Hans-Rainer Klöckner ORCID, Nathan Adams ORCID, Andrew J. Baker ORCID, Matthew Bershady ORCID, Tariq Blecher ORCID, Sarah-Louise Blyth ORCID, Rebecca Bowler ORCID, Barbara Catinella ORCID, Laurent Chemin ORCID and other authors.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Data provided by SHERPA/RoMEO

Abstract

Abstract In the local universe, OH megamasers (OHMs) are detected almost exclusively in infrared-luminous galaxies, with a prevalence that increases with IR luminosity, suggesting that they trace gas-rich galaxy mergers. Given the proximity of the rest frequencies of OH and the hyperfine transition of neutral atomic hydrogen (H i), radio surveys to probe the cosmic evolution of H i in galaxies also offer exciting prospects for exploiting OHMs to probe the cosmic history of gas-rich mergers. Using observations for the Looking At the Distant Universe with the MeerKAT Array (LADUMA) deep H i survey, we report the first untargeted detection of an OHM at z > 0.5, LADUMA J033046.20−275518.1 (nicknamed “Nkalakatha”). The host system, WISEA J033046.26−275518.3, is an infrared-luminous radio galaxy whose optical redshift z ≈ 0.52 confirms the MeerKAT emission-line detection as OH at a redshift z OH = 0.5225 ± 0.0001 rather than H i at lower redshift. The detected spectral line has 18.4σ peak significance, a width of 459 ± 59 km s−1, and an integrated luminosity of (6.31 ± 0.18 [statistical] ± 0.31 [systematic]) × 103 L , placing it among the most luminous OHMs known. The galaxy’s far-infrared luminosity L FIR = (1.576 ±0.013) × 1012 L marks it as an ultraluminous infrared galaxy; its ratio of OH and infrared luminosities is similar to those for lower-redshift OHMs. A comparison between optical and OH redshifts offers a slight indication of an OH outflow. This detection represents the first step toward a systematic exploitation of OHMs as a tracer of galaxy growth at high redshifts.