Imaging the molecular gas in a submm galaxy at z = 4.05: cold mode accretion or a major merger?
C.L. Carilli (NRAO), E. Daddi (CEA), D. Riechers (CIT), F. Walter, (MPIA), A. Weiss (MPIfR), H. Dannerbauer (CEA), G.E. Morrison (UH), J. Wagg, (ESO), Romeel Dave (UA), D. Elbaz (CEA), D. Stern (JPL), M. Dickinson (NOAO),, M. Krips (IRAM), M. Aravena (NRAO)

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution multi-transition imaging to analyze the molecular gas in a luminous z=4.05 submillimeter galaxy, revealing a large, rotating disk likely formed through cold accretion rather than major mergers.
Contribution
It provides detailed imaging evidence supporting a cold mode accretion scenario for galaxy formation at high redshift, challenging the merger-driven model.
Findings
Molecular gas distributed over ~10 kpc with a clumpy, rotating disk.
Dynamical mass within 4 kpc is approximately 3 x 10^{11} solar masses.
Star formation regions are highly dust-obscured and offset from optical emission.
Abstract
We present a high resolution (down to 0.18"), multi-transition imaging study of the molecular gas in the z = 4.05 submillimeter galaxy GN20. GN20 is one of the most luminous starburst galaxy known at z > 4, and is a member of a rich proto-cluster of galaxies at z = 4.05 in GOODS-North. We have observed the CO 1-0 and 2-1 emission with the VLA, the CO 6-5 emission with the PdBI Interferometer, and the 5-4 emission with CARMA. The H_2 mass derived from the CO 1-0 emission is 1.3 \times 10^{11} (\alpha/0.8) Mo. High resolution imaging of CO 2-1 shows emission distributed over a large area, appearing as partial ring, or disk, of ~ 10kpc diameter. The integrated CO excitation is higher than found in the inner disk of the Milky Way, but lower than that seen in high redshift quasar host galaxies and low redshift starburst nuclei. The VLA CO 2-1 image at 0.2" resolution shows resolved, clumpy…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
