Radio studies of galaxy formation: Dense Gas History of the Universe
C.L. Carilli (NRAO), F. Walter, D. Riechers, R. Wang, E. Daddi, J., Wagg, F. Bertoldi, K. Menten

TL;DR
This paper reviews radio astronomy techniques and recent findings on galaxy formation, highlighting the role of molecular gas in star formation across different galaxy populations and cosmic epochs.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of radio studies of galaxy formation, emphasizing the evolution of molecular gas reservoirs and star formation activity from high to intermediate redshifts.
Findings
Massive starburst galaxies have high infrared luminosities and large molecular gas reservoirs.
Radio observations reveal that typical star-forming galaxies at z~1.5-2.5 contain substantial molecular gas without hyper-starbursts.
The peak of cosmic star formation coincides with galaxies being dominated by molecular gas rather than stars.
Abstract
Line and continuum studies at centimeter through submillimeter wavelengths address probe deep into the earliest, most active and dust obscured phases of galaxy formation, and reveal the molecular and cool atomic gas. We summarize the techniques of radio astronomy to perform these studies, then review the progress on radio studies of galaxy formation. The dominant work over the last decade has focused on massive, luminous starburst galaxies (submm galaxies and AGN host galaxies). The far infrared luminosities are ~ 1e13 Lsun, implying star formation rates, SFR > 1e3 Msun/year. Molecular gas reservoirs are found with masses: M(H_2) > 1e10 (alpha/0.8}) Msun. The CO excitation in these luminous systems is much higher than in low redshift spiral galaxies. Imaging of the gas distribution and dynamics suggests strongly interacting and merging galaxies, indicating gravitationally induced, short…
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