Very High Gas Fractions and Extended Gas Reservoirs in z=1.5 Disk Galaxies
E. Daddi, F. Bournaud, F. Walter, H. Dannerbauer, C. Carilli, M., Dickinson, D. Elbaz, G.E. Morrison, D. Riechers, M. Onodera, F. Salmi, M., Krips, D. Stern

TL;DR
This study reveals that z=1.5 BzK galaxies are gas-rich, with extended reservoirs and low star formation efficiencies, resembling scaled-up local disks rather than compact, highly excited high-redshift starbursts.
Contribution
It provides detailed CO observations and dynamical modeling showing high gas fractions and extended gas disks in typical z=1.5 galaxies, a novel insight into galaxy evolution.
Findings
Gas fractions of 50-65% within half-light radii.
Gas depletion times of approximately 0.5 Gyr.
High conversion factor alpha_CO consistent with the Milky Way.
Abstract
We present evidence for very high gas fractions and extended molecular gas reservoirs in normal, near-infrared selected (BzK) galaxies at z~1.5, based on multi-configuration CO[2-1] observations obtained at the IRAM PdBI. Six of the six galaxies observed were securely detected. High resolution observations resolve the CO emission in four of them, implying sizes of order of 6-11 kpc and suggesting the presence of rotation. The UV morphologies are consistent with clumpy, unstable disks, and the UV sizes are consistent with the CO sizes. The star formation efficiencies are homogeneously low and similar to local spirals - the resulting gas depletion times are ~0.5 Gyr, much higher than what is seen in high-z submm galaxies and quasars. The CO luminosities can be predicted to within 0.15 dex from the star formation rates and stellar masses, implying a tight correlation of the gas mass with…
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