Tracing the molecular gas in distant submillimetre galaxies via CO(1-0) imaging with the EVLA
R. J. Ivison (UK ATC, IfA, Edinburgh), P. P. Papadopoulos (Bonn),, Ian Smail (Durham), T. R. Greve (Copenhagen), A. P. Thomson (IfA, Edinburgh),, E. M. Xilouris (Athens), S. C. Chapman (Cambridge)

TL;DR
This study uses EVLA to image CO(1-0) in distant submillimetre galaxies, revealing extended molecular gas and providing new mass estimates that refine our understanding of star formation at high redshift.
Contribution
First EVLA imaging of CO(1-0) in SMGs, showing extended gas and offering improved molecular mass estimates without relying on X(CO).
Findings
CO(1-0) emission is more spatially extended than CO(3-2).
Median molecular gas mass estimated at 2.5 x 10^10 Msun.
Gas masses may be higher than previous estimates based on higher-J CO transitions.
Abstract
We report the results of a pilot study with the EVLA of 12CO J=1-0 emission from four SMGs at z=2.2-2.5, each with an existing detection of CO J=3-2. Using the EVLA's most compact configuration we detect strong, broad J=1-0 line emission from all of our targets. The median line width ratio, sigma(1-0)/sigma(3-2) = 1.15 +/- 0.06, suggests that the J=1-0 is more spatially extended than the J=3-2 emission, a situation confirmed by our maps which reveal velocity structure in several cases and typical sizes of ~16 kpc FWHM. The median Tb ratio is r(3-2/1-0) = 0.55 +/- 0.05, noting that our value may be biased high because of the J=3-2-based sample selection. Naively, this suggests gas masses ~2x higher than estimates made using higher-J transitions of CO, with the discrepency due to the difference in assumed Tb ratio. We also estimate masses using the 12CO J=1-0 line and the observed global…
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