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EVLA observations of a proto-cluster of molecular gas rich galaxies at z = 4.05

Abstract

We present observations of the molecular gas in the GN20 proto-cluster of galaxies at z=4.05z =4.05 using the Expanded Very Large Array (EVLA). This group of galaxies is the ideal laboratory for studying the formation of massive galaxies via luminous, gas-rich starbursts within 1.6 Gyr of the Big Bang. We detect three galaxies in the proto-cluster in CO 2-1 emission, with gas masses (H2_2) between 101010^{10} and 1011×(α/0.8)10^{11} \times (\alpha/0.8) M_\odot. The emission from the brightest source, GN20, is resolved with a size 2"\sim 2", and has a clear north-south velocity gradient, possibly indicating ordered rotation. The gas mass in GN20 is comparable to the stellar mass (1.3×1011×(α/0.8)1.3\times 10^{11} \times (\alpha/0.8) M_\odot and 2.3×10112.3\times 10^{11} M_\odot, respectively), and the sum of gas plus stellar mass is comparable to the dynamical mass of the system (3.4×1011[sin(i)/sin(45o)]2\sim 3.4\times 10^{11} [sin(i)/sin(45^o)]^{-2} M_\odot), within a 5kpc radius. There is also evidence for a tidal tail extending another 2"2" north of the galaxy with a narrow velocity dispersion. GN20 may be a massive, gas rich disk that is gravitationally disturbed, but not completely disrupted. There is one Lyman-break galaxy (BD29079) in the GN20 proto-cluster with an optical spectroscopic redshift within our search volume, and we set a 3σ\sigma limit to the molecular gas mass of this galaxy of 1.1×1010×(α/0.8)1.1\times 10^{10} \times (\alpha/0.8) M_\odot.Comment: AAStex format, 4 figures; prepared for the ApJ Letters EVLA special issu

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    Last time updated on 12/11/2016
    Last time updated on 12/11/2016