CO interferometry of gas-rich spiral galaxies in the outskirts of an intermediate redshift cluster
James E. Geach (Durham), Ian Smail (Durham), Kristen Coppin (Durham),, Sean M. Moran (Johns Hopkins), Alastair C. Edge (Durham), Richard S. Ellis, (Oxford/Caltech)

TL;DR
This study uses CO interferometry to analyze gas-rich starburst galaxies in the outskirts of a galaxy cluster at intermediate redshift, revealing their gas content, star formation rates, and potential evolution into S0 galaxies.
Contribution
First detailed CO(1-0) observations of starburst galaxies in cluster outskirts at z=0.395, linking gas content to galaxy evolution in dense environments.
Findings
Detected strong CO(1-0) emission in both galaxies.
Estimated large cold gas fractions (~50%) in the galaxies.
Predicted rapid stellar mass assembly and possible transformation into S0 galaxies.
Abstract
We present IRAM Plateau de Bure Interferometer 3mm observations of CO(1-0) emission in two 24um-selected starburst galaxies in the outskirts (2-3xR_virial) of the rich cluster Cl0024+16 (z=0.395). The galaxies' inferred far-infrared luminosities place them in the luminous infrared galaxy class (LIRGs, L_FIR>10^11 L_Sun), with star formation rates of ~60 M_Sun/yr. Strong CO(1-0) emission is detected in both galaxies, and we use the CO line luminosity to estimate the mass of cold molecular gas, M(H_2). Assuming M(H_2)/L'_CO = 0.8 M_Sun/(K km^-1 pc^2), we estimate M(H_2) = (5.4-9.1)x10^9 M_Sun for the two galaxies. We estimate the galaxies' dynamical masses from their CO line-widths, M_dyn~1-3x10^10 M_Sun, implying large cold gas fractions in the galaxies' central regions. At their current rates they will complete the assembly of M_Stars~10^10 M_Sun and double their stellar mass within as…
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