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We present optical and near-IR imaging and spectroscopy of SGAS J105039.6$+$001730, a strongly lensed galaxy at z $=$ 3.6252 magnified by $>$30$times$, and derive its physical properties. We measure a stellar mass of log(M$_{*}$/M$_{odot}$) $=$ 9.5 $pm$ 0.35, star formation rates from [O II]$lambda$$lambda$3727 and H-$beta$ of 55 $pm$ 20 and 84 $pm$ 17 M$_{odot}$ yr$^{-1}$, respectively, an electron density of n$_{e} leq$ 10$^{3}$ cm$^{-2}$, an electron temperature of T$_{e} leq$ 14000 K, and a metallicity of 12+log(O/H) $=$ 8.3 $pm$ 0.1. The strong C III]$lambda$$lambda$1907,1909 emission and abundance ratios of C, N, O and Si are consistent with well-studied starbursts at z $sim$ 0 with similar metallicities. Strong P Cygni lines and He II$lambda$1640 emission indicate a significant population of Wolf-Rayet stars, but synthetic spectra of individual populations of young, hot stars do not reproduce the observed integrated P Cygni absorption features. The rest-frame UV spectral features are indicative of a young starburst with high ionization, implying either 1) an ionization parameter significantly higher than suggest by rest-frame optical nebular lines, or 2) differences in one or both of the initial mass function and the properties of ionizing spectra of massive stars. We argue that the observed features are likely the result of a superposition of star forming regions with different physical properties. These results demonstrate the complexity of star formation on scales smaller than individual galaxies, and highlight the importance of systematic effects that result from smearing together the signatures of individual star forming regions within galaxies.
We present Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array measurements of the `Cosmic Seagull, a strongly magnified galaxy at z=2.7779 behind the Bullet Cluster. We report CO(3-2) and continuum 344~$mu$m (rest-frame) data at one of the highest differen
We present a comprehensive analysis of the rest-frame UV to near-IR spectral energy distributions and rest-frame optical spectra of four of the brightest gravitationally lensed galaxies in the literature: RCSGA 032727-132609 at z=1.70, MS1512-cB58 at
We present a strong lensing system in which a double source is imaged 5 times by 2 early-type galaxies. We take advantage in this target of the multi-band photometry obtained as part of the CLASH program, complemented by the spectroscopic data of the
We present observations of SPT-S J053816-5030.8, a gravitationally-lensed dusty star forming galaxy (DSFG) at z = 2.7817, first discovered at millimeter wavelengths by the South Pole Telescope. SPT 0538-50 is typical of the brightest sources found by
We report the detection of CO(3-2) emission from a bright, gravitationally lensed Lyman Break Galaxy, LBGJ213512.73-010143 (the Cosmic Eye), at z=3.07 using the Plateau de Bure Interferometer. This is only the second detection of molecular gas emissi