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Creators/Authors contains: "Wardlow, J"

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  1. Abstract We present JWST NIRCam imaging targeting 13z ~ 3 infrared-luminous (LIR ∼ 5 × 1012L) galaxies from the ALESS survey with uniquely deep, high-resolution (0 . 08–0 . 16) Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array 870μm imaging. The 2.0–4.4μm (observed frame) NIRCam imaging reveals the rest-frame near-infrared stellar emission in these submillimeter-selected galaxies at the same (sub)kiloparsec resolution as the 870μm dust continuum. The newly revealed stellar morphologies show striking similarities with the dust continuum morphologies at 870μm, with the centers and position angles agreeing for most sources, clearly illustrating that the spatial offsets reported previously between the 870μm and Hubble Space Telescope morphologies were due to strong differential dust obscuration. The F444W sizes are 78% ± 21% larger than those measured at 870μm, in contrast to recent results from hydrodynamical simulations that predict larger 870μm sizes. We report evidence for significant dust obscuration in F444W for the highest-redshift sources, emphasizing the importance of longer-wavelength MIRI imaging. The majority of the sources show evidence that they are undergoing mergers/interactions, including tidal tails/plumes—some of which are also detected at 870μm. We find a clear correlation between NIRCam colors and 870μm surface brightness on  ∼1 kpc scales, indicating that the galaxies are primarily red due to dust—not stellar age—and we show that the dust structure on  ∼kpc scales is broadly similar to that in nearby galaxies. Finally, we find no strong stellar bars in the rest-frame near-infrared, suggesting the extended bar-like features seen at 870μm are highly obscured and/or gas-dominated structures that are likely early precursors to significant bulge growth. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available January 10, 2026
  2. We present images obtained with LABOCA on the APEX telescope of a sample of 22 galaxies selected via their red Herschel SPIRE 250-, 350- and $$500\textrm{-}\mu\textrm{m}$$ colors. We aim to see if these luminous, rare and distant galaxies are signposting dense regions in the early Universe. Our $$870\textrm{-}\mu\textrm{m}$$ survey covers an area of $$\approx0.8\,\textrm{deg}^2$$ down to an average r.m.s. of $$3.9\,\textrm{mJy beam}^{-1}$$, with our five deepest maps going $$\approx2\times$$ deeper still. We catalog 86 DSFGs around our 'signposts', detected above a significance of $$3.5\sigma$$. This implies a $$100\pm30\%$$ over-density of $$S_{870}>8.5\,\textrm{mJy}$$ DSFGs, excluding our signposts, when comparing our number counts to those in 'blank fields'. Thus, we are $$99.93\%$$ confident that our signposts are pinpointing over-dense regions in the Universe, and $$\approx95\%$$ confident that these regions are over-dense by a factor of at least $$\ge1.5\times$$. Using template SEDs and SPIRE/LABOCA photometry we derive a median photometric redshift of $$z=3.2\pm0.2$$ for our signposts, with an interquartile range of $$z=2.8\textrm{-}3.6$$. We constrain the DSFGs likely responsible for this over-density to within $$|\Delta z|\le0.65$$ of their respective signposts. These 'associated' DSFGs are radially distributed within $$1.6\pm0.5\,\textrm{Mpc}$$ of their signposts, have median SFRs of $$\approx(1.0\pm0.2)\times10^3\,M_{\odot}\,\textrm{yr}^{-1}$$ (for a Salpeter stellar IMF) and median gas reservoirs of $$\sim1.7\times10^{11}\,M_{\odot}$$. These candidate proto-clusters have average total SFRs of at least $$\approx (2.3\pm0.5)\times10^3\,M_{\odot}\,\textrm{yr}^{-1}$$ and space densities of $$\sim9\times10^{-7}\,\textrm{Mpc}^{-3}$$, consistent with the idea that their constituents may evolve to become massive ETGs in the centers of the rich galaxy clusters we see today. 
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