Observations of Dense Molecular Gas in a Quasar Host Galaxy at z=6.42: Further Evidence for a Non-Linear Dense Gas - Star Formation Relation at Early Cosmic Times
Dominik A. Riechers (1), Fabian Walter (1), Christopher L. Carilli, (2), Frank Bertoldi (3) ((1)-MPIA Heidelberg, Germany; (2)-NRAO Socorro, USA;, (3)-AIfA Bonn, Germany)

TL;DR
This study searches for dense molecular gas in a high-redshift quasar host galaxy, finding no HCN emission but suggesting a higher star formation efficiency and possible non-linear dense gas-star formation relation at early cosmic times.
Contribution
It provides the first sensitive limits on HCN emission in a z=6.42 quasar host, indicating a potential deviation from the linear dense gas-star formation relation observed locally.
Findings
No HCN emission detected, L'(HCN) < 3.3 x 10^9 K km/s pc^2
L(FIR)/L'(HCN) ratio is significantly higher than local galaxies
Possible evidence for a non-linear dense gas-star formation relation at high redshift
Abstract
We report a sensitive search for the HCN(J=2-1) emission line towards SDSS J1148+5251 at z=6.42 with the VLA. HCN emission is a star formation indicator, tracing dense molecular hydrogen gas (n(H2) >= 10^4 cm^-3) within star-forming molecular clouds. No emission was detected in the deep interferometer maps of J1148+5251. We derive a limit for the HCN line luminosity of L'(HCN) < 3.3 x 10^9 K km/s pc^2, corresponding to a HCN/CO luminosity ratio of L'(HCN)/L'(CO) < 0.13. This limit is consistent with a fraction of dense molecular gas in J1148+5251 within the range of nearby ultraluminous infrared galaxies (ULIRGs; median value: L'(HCN)/L'(CO) = 0.17 {+0.05/-0.08}) and HCN-detected z>2 galaxies (0.17 {+0.09/-0.08}). The relationship between L'(HCN) and L(FIR) is considered to be a measure for the efficiency at which stars form out of dense gas. In the nearby universe, these quantities…
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