COLD GASS, an IRAM legacy survey of molecular gas in massive galaxies: I. Relations between H2, HI, stellar content and structural properties
Amelie Saintonge, Guinevere Kauffmann, Carsten Kramer, Linda J., Tacconi, Christof Buchbender, Barbara Catinella, Silvia Fabello, Javier, Gracia-Carpio, Jing Wang, Luca Cortese, Jian Fu, Reinhard Genzel, Riccardo, Giovanelli, Qi Guo, Martha P. Haynes, Timothy M. Heckman

TL;DR
This study presents an unbiased survey of molecular gas in massive nearby galaxies, revealing thresholds in galaxy structure affecting gas detection and insights into galaxy quenching and gas re-accretion processes.
Contribution
It provides the first large-scale measurements of CO in a stellar mass-selected galaxy sample, identifying structural thresholds influencing molecular gas presence.
Findings
54% CO detection rate among surveyed galaxies
Detection thresholds linked to stellar mass surface density and concentration
Average molecular-to-atomic hydrogen ratio is 0.3
Abstract
We are conducting COLD GASS, a legacy survey for molecular gas in nearby galaxies. Using the IRAM 30m telescope, we measure the CO(1-0) line in a sample of ~350 nearby (D=100-200 Mpc), massive galaxies (log(M*/Msun)>10.0). The sample is selected purely according to stellar mass, and therefore provides an unbiased view of molecular gas in these systems. By combining the IRAM data with SDSS photometry and spectroscopy, GALEX imaging and high-quality Arecibo HI data, we investigate the partition of condensed baryons between stars, atomic gas and molecular gas in 0.1-10L* galaxies. In this paper, we present CO luminosities and molecular hydrogen masses for the first 222 galaxies. The overall CO detection rate is 54%, but our survey also uncovers the existence of sharp thresholds in galaxy structural parameters such as stellar mass surface density and concentration index, below which all…
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.
