Properties of the molecular gas in a starbursting QSO at z=1.83 in the COSMOS field
Manuel Aravena, Frank Bertoldi, Eva Schinnerer, Axel Weiss, Knud, Jahnke, Chris L. Carilli, David T. Frayer, Christian Henkel, Marcella Brusa,, Karl M. Menten, Mara Salvato, Vernesa Smolcic

TL;DR
This study investigates the molecular gas properties of a z=1.83 starbursting QSO, revealing less excited gas than typical starbursts, with implications for galaxy evolution and AGN activity.
Contribution
First detailed CO line analysis of a high-redshift QSO showing properties transitional between submillimeter galaxies and quasars.
Findings
Gas is less excited than in nearby starbursts and other high-z quasars.
H2 mass estimated at (3.6 - 5.4) x 10^{10} M_sun.
Dust temperatures of 42 K and 160 K with a dust mass of 1.2 x 10^{9} M_sun.
Abstract
Using the IRAM 30m telescope, we have detected the CO J=2-1, 4-3, 5-4, and 6-5 emission lines in the millimeter-bright, blank-field selected AGN COSMOS J100038+020822 at redshift z=1.8275. The sub-local thermodynamic equilibrium (LTE) excitation of the J=4 level implies that the gas is less excited than that in typical nearby starburst galaxies such as NGC253, and in the high-redshift quasars studied to date, such as J1148+5251 or BR1202-0725. Large velocity gradient (LVG) modeling of the CO line spectral energy distribution (CO SED; flux density vs. rotational quantum number) yields H2 densities in the range 10^{3.5}--10^{4.0} cm-3, and kinetic temperatures between 50 K and 200 K. The H2 mass of (3.6 - 5.4) x 10^{10} M_sun implied by the line intensities compares well with our estimate of the dynamical mass within the inner 1.5 kpc of the object. Fitting a two-component gray body…
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