Galaxy Evolution and Star Formation Efficiency at 0.2 < z < 0.6
F. Combes (Obs-Paris), S. Garcia-Burillo (OAN-Madrid), J. Braine, (Obs-Bordeaux), E. Schinnerer (MPIA-Heidelberg), F. Walter (MPIA-Heidelberg),, L. Colina (CSIC-Madrid)

TL;DR
This study investigates the molecular gas content and star formation efficiency of ULIRGs at redshifts 0.2 to 0.6, revealing increased gas availability and higher efficiencies compared to local galaxies, indicating significant galaxy evolution during this period.
Contribution
First CO survey of ULIRGs at 0.2<z<0.6, demonstrating increased gas mass and star formation efficiency compared to local counterparts.
Findings
Detected 18 out of 30 galaxies, with 16 new detections.
Average CO luminosity corresponds to 1.6×10^{10} M_sun of H2.
Star formation efficiencies are three times higher than local ULIRGs.
Abstract
We present the results of a CO line survey of 30 galaxies at moderate redshift (z \sim 0.2-0.6), with the IRAM 30m telescope, with the goal to follow galaxy evolution and in particular the star formation efficiency (SFE) as defined by the ratio between far-infrared luminosity and molecular gas mass (LFIR/M(H2)). The sources are selected to be ultra-luminous infrared galaxies (ULIRGs), with LFIR larger than 2.8 10^{12} Lsol, experiencing starbursts; adopting a low ULIRG CO-to-H2 conversion factor, their gas consumption time-scale is lower than 10^8 yr. To date only very few CO observations exist in this redshift range that spans nearly 25% of the universe's age. Considerable evolution of the star formation rate is already observed during this period. 18 galaxies out of our sample of 30 are detected (of which 16 are new detections), corresponding to a detection rate of 60%. The average CO…
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