A Massive Molecular Gas Reservoir in the z=5.3 Submillimeter Galaxy AzTEC-3
Dominik A. Riechers (1,7), Peter L. Capak (2), Christopher L. Carilli, (3), Pierre Cox (4), Roberto Neri (4), Nicholas Z. Scoville (1), Eva, Schinnerer (5), Frank Bertoldi (6), Lin Yan (2) ((1) Caltech, USA, (2) SSC,, Caltech, USA, (3) NRAO Socorro, USA, (4) IRAM, France

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a massive molecular gas reservoir in a high-redshift submillimeter galaxy at z=5.3, revealing insights into early galaxy formation and starburst activity in the young universe.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed measurement of molecular gas content in a z>5 SMG, demonstrating a large gas reservoir comparable to lower-redshift counterparts.
Findings
Massive gas reservoir of 5.3×10^10 Msun detected
Starburst can be sustained for at least 30 million years
Presence of both diffuse and dense gas components
Abstract
We report the detection of CO 2-1, 5-4, and 6-5 emission in the highest-redshift submillimeter galaxy (SMG) AzTEC-3 at z=5.298, using the Expanded Very Large Array and the Plateau de Bure Interferometer. These observations ultimately confirm the redshift, making AzTEC-3 the most submillimeter-luminous galaxy in a massive z=5.3 protocluster structure in the COSMOS field. The strength of the CO line emission reveals a large molecular gas reservoir with a mass of 5.3e10 (alpha_CO/0.8) Msun, which can maintain the intense 1800 Msun/yr starburst in this system for at least 30 Myr, increasing the stellar mass by up to a factor of six in the process. This gas mass is comparable to `typical' z~2 SMGs, and constitutes >~80% of the baryonic mass (gas+stars) and 30%-80% of the total (dynamical) mass in this galaxy. The molecular gas reservoir has a radius of <4 kpc and likely consists of a…
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