The Properties of the Interstellar Medium within a Star-Forming Galaxy at z=2.3
A.L.R. Danielson (1), A.M. Swinbank (1), Ian Smail (1), P. Cox (2),, A.C. Edge (1), A. Weiss (3), A.I. Harris (4), A.J. Baker (5), C. De Breuck, (6), J.E. Geach (1), R.J. Ivison (7,8), M. Krips (2), A. Lungdren (9), S., Longmore (10), R. Neri (2), B. Ocana Flacquer (11) ((1) ICC

TL;DR
This study analyzes the interstellar medium of a star-forming galaxy at z=2.3, revealing a complex, two-phase gas structure with conditions similar to local ULIRGs, and explores the relation between gas properties and star formation.
Contribution
It provides detailed molecular and atomic gas observations of a high-redshift galaxy, uncovering its ISM properties and kinematic complexity with unprecedented detail due to gravitational lensing.
Findings
Identification of a two-phase ISM with hot dense and cool extended components.
Gas exposed to UV radiation ~1000 times stronger than in the Milky Way.
Evidence of multiple kinematic components and high cosmic ray flux.
Abstract
We present an analysis of the molecular and atomic gas emission in the rest-frame far-infrared and sub-millimetre, from the lensed z=2.3 sub-millimetre galaxy SMM J2135-0102. We obtain very high signal-to-noise detections of 11 transitions from 3 species and limits on a further 20 transitions from 9 species. We use the 12CO, [CI] and HCN line strengths to investigate the gas mass, kinematic structure and interstellar medium (ISM) chemistry, and find strong evidence for a two-phase medium comprising a hot, dense, luminous component and an underlying extended cool, low-excitation massive component. Employing photo-dissociation region models we show that on average the molecular gas is exposed to a UV radiation field that is ~1000 x more intense than the Milky Way, with star-forming regions having a characteristic density of n~10^4 /cm^3. These conditions are similar to those found in…
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