The ISM in distant star-forming galaxies: Turbulent pressure, fragmentation and cloud scaling relations in a dense gas disk at z=2.3
Mark Swinbank (1), Padelis Papadopoulos (2), Pierre Cox (3), Melanie, Krips (3), Rob Ivison (4,5) Ian Smail (1) Alasdair Thomson (4), Roberto Neri, (3), Johan Richard (6), Harald Ebeling (7), ((1) ICC, Durham, (2) MPIfR,, (3) IRAM, (4) IfA, Edinburgh, (5) UK-ATC, Edinburgh

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution observations of a distant star-forming galaxy to analyze its turbulent interstellar medium, revealing rapid fragmentation, dense star-forming regions, and deviations from local molecular cloud scaling laws due to high external pressure.
Contribution
It provides detailed measurements of gas dynamics, turbulence, and fragmentation in a z=2.3 galaxy, highlighting how high external pressure influences cloud properties and star formation.
Findings
The galaxy's gas disk is rotationally supported with v/sigma=3.5.
Gas fragments into massive clumps on ~400pc scales.
Star-forming regions are 10x denser than in local galaxies.
Abstract
We have used the IRAM Plateau de Bure Interferometer and the Expanded Very Large Array to obtain a high resolution map of the CO(6-5) and CO(1-0) emission in the lensed, star-forming galaxy SMMJ2135-0102 at z=2.32. The kinematics of the gas are well described by a model of a rotationally-supported disk with an inclination-corrected rotation speed, v_rot = 320+/-25km/s, a ratio of rotational- to dispersion- support of v/sigma=3.5+/-0.2 and a dynamical mass of 6.0+/-0.5x10^10Mo within a radius of 2.5kpc. The disk has a Toomre parameter, Q=0.50+/-0.15, suggesting the gas will rapidly fragment into massive clumps on scales of L_J ~ 400pc. We identify star-forming regions on these scales and show that they are 10x denser than those in quiescent environments in local galaxies, and significantly offset from the local molecular cloud scaling relations (Larson's relations). The large offset…
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