202 research outputs found
COLDz: Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array discovery of a gas-rich galaxy in COSMOS
The broad spectral bandwidth at mm and cm-wavelengths provided by the recent upgrades to the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array (VLA) has made it possible to conduct unbiased searches for molecular CO line emission at redshifts, z > 1.31. We present the discovery of a gas-rich, star-forming galaxy at z = 2.48, through the detection of CO(1-0) line emission in the COLDz survey, through a sensitive, Ka-band (31 to 39 GHz) VLA survey of a 6.5 square arcminute region of the COSMOS field. We argue that the broad line (FWHM ~570 +/- 80 km/s) is most likely to be CO(1-0) at z=2.48, as the integrated emission is spatially coincident with an infrared-detected galaxy with a photometric redshift estimate of z = 3.2 +/- 0.4. The CO(1-0) line luminosity is L'_CO = (2.2 +/- 0.3) x 10^{10} K km/s pc^2, suggesting a cold molecular gas mass of M_gas ~ (2 - 8)x10^{10}M_solar depending on the assumed value of the molecular gas mass to CO luminosity ratio alpha_CO. The estimated infrared luminosity from the (rest-frame) far-infrared spectral energy distribution (SED) is L_IR = 2.5x10^{12} L_solar and the star-formation rate is ~250 M_solar/yr, with the SED shape indicating substantial dust obscuration of the stellar light. The infrared to CO line luminosity ratio is ~114+/-19 L_solar/(K km/s pc^2), similar to galaxies with similar SFRs selected at UV/optical to radio wavelengths. This discovery confirms the potential for molecular emission line surveys as a route to study populations of gas-rich galaxies in the future
The Molecular Gas Reservoirs of Galaxies: A comparison of CO(1-0) and dust-based molecular gas masses
We test the use of long-wavelength dust continuum emission as a molecular gas
tracer at high redshift, via a unique sample of 12, z~2 galaxies with
observations of both the dust continuum and CO(1-0) line emission (obtained
with the Atacama Large Millimeter Array and Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array,
respectively). Our work is motivated by recent, high redshift studies that
measure molecular gas masses (\ensuremath{\rm{M}_{\rm{mol}}}) via a calibration
of the rest-frame m luminosity () against the
CO(1-0)-derived \ensuremath{\rm{M}_{\rm{mol}}}\ of star-forming galaxies. We
hereby test whether this method is valid for the types of high-redshift,
star-forming galaxies to which it has been applied. We recover a clear
correlation between the rest-frame m luminosity, inferred from the
single-band, long-wavelength flux, and the CO(1-0) line luminosity, consistent
with the samples used to perform the m calibration. The molecular gas
masses, derived from , agree to within a factor of
two with those derived from CO(1-0). We show that this factor of two
uncertainty can arise from the values of the dust emissivity index and
temperature that need to be assumed in order to extrapolate from the observed
frequency to the rest-frame at 850. The extrapolation to
850 therefore has a smaller effect on the accuracy of \Mmol\
derived via single-band dust-continuum observations than the assumed
CO(1-0)-to-\ensuremath{\rm{M}_{\rm{mol}}}\ conversion factor. We therefore
conclude that single-band observations of long-wavelength dust emission can be
used to reliably constrain the molecular gas masses of massive, star-forming
galaxies at
Astronomy: Starbursts near and far
Observations of intensely bright star-forming galaxies both close by and in
the distant Universe at first glance seem to emphasize their similarity. But
look a little closer, and differences emerge.Comment: 6 pages including 1 figur
Imaging the cold molecular gas in SDSS J1148 + 5251 at z = 6.4
We present Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array (VLA) observations of the CO () line emission towards the quasar SDSS
J (J). The molecular gas is found to be
marginally resolved with a major axis of (consistent with previous size
measurements of the CO () emission). We observe tentative
evidence for extended line emission towards the south west on a scale of
~, but this is only detected at significance and should be
confirmed. The position of the molecular emission region is in excellent
agreement with previous detections of low frequency radio continuum emission as
well as [C ii] line and thermal dust continuum emission. These CO () observations provide an anchor for the low excitation part of
the molecular line SED. We find no evidence for extended low excitation
component, neither in the spectral line energy distribution nor the image. We
fit a single kinetic gas temperature model of 50 K. We revisit the gas and
dynamical masses in light of this new detection of a low order transition of
CO, and confirm previous findings that there is no extended reservoir of cold
molecular gas in J, and that the source departs substantially from
the low relationship between black hole mass and bulge mass. Hence, the
characteristics of J at are very similar to ~
quasars, in the lack of a diffuse cold gas reservoir and kpc-size compactness
of the star forming region.IIS thanks the Science & Technology Facilities Council for a studentship.This article has been accepted for publication in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society (c): 2015 The Authors. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society. All rights reserved
ALMA suggests outflows in z ~ 5.5 galaxies
We present the first attempt to detect outflows from galaxies approaching the
Epoch of Reionization (EoR) using a sample of 9 star-forming () galaxies for which the [CII]158m line
has been previously obtained with ALMA. We first fit each line with a Gaussian
function and compute the residuals by subtracting the best fitting model from
the data. We combine the residuals of all sample galaxies and find that the
total signal is characterised by a flux excess of mJy extended over
km~s. Although we cannot exclude that part of this signal is
due to emission from faint satellite galaxies, we show that the most probable
explanation for the detected flux excess is the presence of broad wings in the
[CII] lines, signatures of starburst-driven outflows. We infer an average
outflow rate of , providing a loading
factor in agreement with observed local
starbursts. Our interpretation is consistent with outcomes from zoomed
hydro-simulations of {\it Dahlia}, a galaxy () whose feedback-regulated star formation results into an
outflow rate . The quality of the ALMA
data is not sufficient for a detailed analysis of the [CII] line profile in
individual galaxies. Nevertheless, our results suggest that starburst-driven
outflows are in place in the EoR and provide useful indications for future ALMA
campaigns. Deeper observations of the [CII] line in this sample are required to
better characterise feedback at high- and to understand the role of outflows
in shaping early galaxy formation
(Sub)millimetre interferometric imaging of a sample of COSMOS/AzTEC submillimetre galaxies. II. The spatial extent of the radio-emitting regions
Radio emission at centimetre wavelengths from highly star-forming galaxies, like submillimetre galaxies (SMGs), is dominated by synchrotron radiation arising from supernova activity. Hence, radio continuum imaging has the potential to determine the spatial extent of star formation in these types of galaxies. Using deep, high-resolution (1σ = 2.3 μJy beam-1; 0.75 arcsec) centimetre radio-continuum observations taken by the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array (VLA)-COSMOS 3 GHz Large Project, we studied the radio-emitting sizes of a flux-limited sample of SMGs in the COSMOS field. The target SMGs were originally discovered in a 1.1 mm continuum survey carried out with the AzTEC bolometer, and followed up with higher resolution interferometric (sub)millimetre continuum observations. Of the 39 SMGs studied here, 3 GHz emission was detected towards 18 of them (~46 ± 11%) with signal-to-noise ratios in the range of S/N = 4.2-37.4. Towards four SMGs (AzTEC2, 5, 8, and 11), we detected two separate 3 GHz sources with projected separations of ~1''&dotbelow;5-6''&dotbelow;6, but they might be physically related in only one or two cases (AzTEC2 and 11). Using two-dimensional elliptical Gaussian fits, we derived a median deconvolved major axis FWHM size of 0''&dotbelow;54±0''&dotbelow;11 for our 18 SMGs detected at 3 GHz. For the 15 SMGs with known redshift we derived a median linear major axis FWHM of 4.2 ± 0.9 kpc. No clear correlation was found between the radio-emitting size and the 3 GHz or submm flux density, or the redshift of the SMG. However, there is a hint of larger radio sizes at z ~ 2.5-5 compared to lower redshifts. The sizes we derived are consistent with previous SMG sizes measured at 1.4 GHz and in mid-J CO emission, but significantly larger than those seen in the (sub)mm continuum emission (typically probing the rest-frame far-infrared with median FWHM sizes of only ~1.5-2.5 kpc). One possible scenario is that SMGs have i) an extended gas component with a low dust temperature, which can be traced by low- to mid-J CO line emission and radio continuum emission; and ii) a warmer, compact starburst region giving rise to the high-excitation line emission of CO, which could dominate the dust continuum size measurements. Because of the rapid cooling of cosmic-ray electrons in dense starburst galaxies (~104-105 yr), the more extended synchrotron radio-emitting size being a result of cosmic-ray diffusion seems unlikely. Instead, if SMGs are driven by galaxy mergers - a process where the galactic magnetic fields can be pulled out to larger spatial scales - the radio synchrotron emission might arise from more extended magnetised interstellar medium around the starburst region
A molecular line scan in the Hubble Deep Field North
We present a molecular line scan in the Hubble Deep Field North (HDF-N) that covers the entire 3mm window (79-115 GHz) using the IRAM Plateau de Bure Interferometer. Our CO redshift coverage spans z2. We reach a CO detection limit that is deep enough to detect essentially all z>1 CO lines reported in the literature so far. We have developed and applied different line searching algorithms, resulting in the discovery of 17 line candidates. We estimate that the rate of false positive line detections is ~2/17. We identify optical/NIR counterparts from the deep ancillary database of the HDF-N for seven of these candidates and investigate their available SEDs. Two secure CO detections in our scan are identified with star-forming galaxies at z=1.784 and at z=2.047. These galaxies have colors consistent with the `BzK' color selection and they show relatively bright CO emission compared with galaxies of similar dust continuum luminosity. We also detect two spectral lines in the submillimeter galaxy HDF850.1 at z=5.183. We consider an additional 9 line candidates as high quality. Our observations also provide a deep 3mm continuum map (1-sigma noise level = 8.6 μJy/beam). Via a stacking approach, we find that optical/MIR bright galaxies contribute only to <50% of the SFR density at 1<z<3, unless high dust temperatures are invoked. The present study represents a first, fundamental step towards an unbiased census of molecular gas in `normal' galaxies at high-z, a crucial goal of extragalactic astronomy in the ALMA era
Physical properties of z>4 submillimeter galaxies in the COSMOS field
We study the physical properties of a sample of 6 SMGs in the COSMOS field, spectroscopically confirmed to lie at z>4. We use new GMRT 325 MHz and 3 GHz JVLA data to probe the rest-frame 1.4 GHz emission at z=4, and to estimate the sizes of the star-forming (SF) regions of these sources, resp. Combining our size estimates with those available in the literature for AzTEC1 and AzTEC3 we infer a median radio-emitting size for our z>4 SMGs of (0.63"+/-0.12")x(0.35"+/-0.05") or 4.1x2.3 kpc^2 (major times minor axis; assuming z=4.5) or lower if we take the two marginally resolved SMGs as unresolved. This is consistent with the sizes of SF regions in lower-redshift SMGs, and local normal galaxies, yet higher than the sizes of SF regions of local ULIRGs. Our SMG sample consists of a fair mix of compact and more clumpy systems with multiple, perhaps merging, components. With an average formation time of ~280 Myr, derived through modeling of the UV-IR SEDs, the studied SMGs are young systems. The average stellar mass, dust temperature, and IR luminosity we derive are M*~1.4x10^11 M_sun, T_dust~43 K, and L_IR~1.3x10^13L_sun, resp. The average L_IR is up to an order of magnitude higher than for SMGs at lower redshifts. Our SMGs follow the correlation between dust temperature and IR luminosity as derived for Herschel-selected 0.1=1.95+/-0.26 for our sample, compared to q~2.6 for IR luminous galaxies at z4 SMGs put them at the high end of the L_IR-T_dust distribution of SMGs, and that our SMGs form a morphologically heterogeneous sample. Thus, further in-depth analyses of large, statistical samples of high-redshift SMGs are needed to fully understand their role in galaxy formation and evolution
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