- Zhou, L;
- Wang, T;
- Daddi, E;
- Coogan, R;
- Sun, H;
- Xu, K;
- Arumugam, V;
- Jin, S;
- Liu, D;
- Lu, S;
- Sillassen, N;
- Wang, Y;
- Shi, Y;
- Zhang, Z;
- Tan, Q;
- Gu, Q;
- Elbaz, D;
- Le Bail, A;
- Magnelli, B;
- Gómez-Guijarro, C;
- d’Eugenio, C;
- Magdis, G;
- Valentino, F;
- Ji, Z;
- Gobat, R;
- Delvecchio, I;
- Xiao, M;
- Strazzullo, V;
- Finoguenov, A;
- Schinnerer, E;
- Rich, RM;
- Huang, J;
- Dai, Y;
- Chen, Y;
- Gao, F;
- Yang, T;
- Hao, Q
The study of distant galaxy groups and clusters at the peak epoch of star formation is limited by the lack of a statistically and homogeneously selected and spectroscopically confirmed sample. Recent discoveries of concentrated starburst activities in cluster cores have opened a new window to hunt for these structures based on their integrated IR luminosities. Here, we carry out a large NOEMA (NOrthern Extended Millimeter Array) program targeting a statistical sample of infrared-luminous sources associated with overdensities of massive galaxies at z > 2, the Noema formIng Cluster survEy (NICE). We present the first result from the ongoing NICE survey, a compact group at z = 3.95 in the Lockman Hole field (LH-SBC3), confirmed via four massive (M∗ ≳ 1010.5 M⊙) galaxies detected in the CO(4-3) and [CI](1-0) lines. The four CO-detected members of LH-SBC3 are distributed over a 180 kpc physical scale and the entire structure has an estimated halo mass of ~1013 M⊙ and total star formation rate of ~4000 M⊙ yr-1. In addition, the most massive galaxy hosts a radio-loud active galactic nucleus with L1.4 GHz, rest = 3.0 × 1025 W Hz-1. The discovery of LH-SBC3 demonstrates the feasibility of our method to efficiently identify high-z compact groups or cluster cores undergoing formation. The existence of these starbursting cluster cores up to z ~ 4 provides critical insights into the mass assembly history of the central massive galaxies in clusters.