The molecular gas content of z > 6.5 Lyman-alpha emitters
Jeff Wagg, Nissim Kanekar, Chris Carilli (NRAO-Socorro)

TL;DR
This study used the Green Bank Telescope to search for CO emission in two high-redshift Lyman-alpha emitters, setting the strongest limits so far on their molecular gas content and suggesting they have lower CO luminosities than other massive high-z galaxies.
Contribution
First sensitive CO J=1-0 line emission constraints for z > 6.5 LAEs, providing new limits on their molecular gas masses and implications for early galaxy evolution.
Findings
No CO J=1-0 emission detected in either LAE.
HCM 6A has the strongest limits for a z > 6 galaxy.
High star formation and dust do not imply high CO luminosity.
Abstract
We present results from a sensitive search for CO J=1-0 line emission in two z> 6.5 Lyman-alpha emitters (LAEs) with the Green Bank Telescope. CO J=1-0 emission was not detected from either object. For HCM 6A, at z ~ 6.56, the lensing magnification factor of ~4.5 implies that the CO non-detection yields stringent constraints on the CO J=1-0 line luminosity and molecular gas mass of the LAE, L'(CO) < 6.1x10^9 x (dV/300)^(1/2) K km/s pc^2 and M(H_2) < 4.9x10^9 x (dV/300)^(1/2) x (X(CO)/0.8) Msun. These are the strongest limits obtained so far for a z >~ 6 galaxy. For IOK-1, the constraints are somewhat less sensitive, L'(CO) < 2.3x10^10 x (dV/300)^(1/2) K km/s pc^2 and M(H_2) < 1.9x10^10 x (dV/300)^(1/2) x (X(CO)/0.8) Msun. The non-detection of CO J=1-0 emission in HCM~6A, whose high estimated star formation rate, dust extinction, and lensing magnification make it one of the best high-z…
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