CO J=2-1 line emission in cluster galaxies at z~1: fueling star formation in dense environments
Jeff Wagg, Alexandra Pope, Stacey Alberts, Lee Armus, Mark Brodwin,, Robert S. Bussmann, Vandana Desai, Arjun Dey, Buell Jannuzi, Emeric Le, Floc'h, Jason Melbourne, and Daniel Stern

TL;DR
This study investigates CO J=2-1 emission in z~1 cluster galaxies, finding non-detections in two dust-obscured galaxies but detecting molecular gas in a third galaxy, highlighting the presence of fuel for star formation and AGN activity in cluster outskirts.
Contribution
First measurement of CO J=2-1 emission in cluster galaxies at z~1, revealing molecular gas reservoirs in galaxies outside cluster centers.
Findings
No CO detected in two DOGs, setting upper limits on molecular gas.
Serendipitous detection of CO in a galaxy near the cluster outskirts.
Presence of molecular gas indicates potential for star formation and AGN activity in dense environments.
Abstract
We present observations of CO J=2-1 line emission in infrared-luminous cluster galaxies at z~1 using the IRAM Plateau de Bure Interferometer. Our two primary targets are optically faint, dust-obscured galaxies (DOGs) found to lie within 2 Mpc of the centers of two massive (>10^14 Msun) galaxy clusters. CO line emission is not detected in either DOG. We calculate 3-sigma upper limits to the CO J=2-1 line luminosities, L'_CO < 6.08x10^9 and < 6.63x10^9 K km/s pc^2. Assuming a CO-to-H_2 conversion factor derived for ultraluminous infrared galaxies in the local Universe, this translates to limits on the cold molecular gas mass of M_H_2 < 4.86x10^9 Msun and M_H_2 < 5.30x10^9 Msun. Both DOGs exhibit mid-infrared continuum emission that follows a power-law, suggesting that an AGN contributes to the dust heating. As such, estimates of the star formation efficiencies in these DOGs are uncertain.…
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