Predictions for the CO emission of galaxies from a coupled simulation of galaxy formation and photon dominated regions
Claudia del P. Lagos (1), Estelle Bayet (2), Carlton M. Baugh (1),, Cedric G. Lacey (1), Tom Bell (3), Nikolaos Fanidakis (4), James Geach (5), ((1) ICC, Durham, (2) Oxford, (3) Centro Astrobiologia, (4) MPAI, (5) McGill)

TL;DR
This paper combines galaxy formation and photon dominated region models to predict CO emission in galaxies across redshifts, matching observations and exploring high-redshift galaxy gas evolution with ALMA.
Contribution
It introduces a hybrid model coupling GALFORM and UCL_PDR to predict CO emission lines from galaxy simulations, accounting for metallicity and ISM conditions.
Findings
Model accurately reproduces local CO luminosity functions.
Predicted CO SLEDs match high-redshift observations.
Little evolution in CO-to-IR ratio up to z~5.
Abstract
We combine the galaxy formation model GALFORM with the Photon Dominated Region code UCL_PDR to study the emission from the rotational transitions of 12CO (CO) in galaxies from z=0 to z=6 in the Lambda CDM framework. GALFORM is used to predict the molecular (H2) and atomic hydrogen (HI) gas contents of galaxies using the pressure-based empirical star formation relation of Blitz & Rosolowsky. From the predicted H2 mass and the conditions in the interstellar medium, we estimate the CO emission in the rotational transitions 1-0 to 10-9 by applying the UCL_PDR model to each galaxy. We find that deviations from the Milky-Way CO-H2 conversion factor come mainly from variations in metallicity, and in the average gas and star formation rate surface densities. In the local universe, the model predicts a CO(1-0) luminosity function (LF), CO-to-total infrared (IR) luminosity ratios for multiple CO…
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.
