A search of CO emission lines in blazars: the low molecular gas content of BL Lac objects compared to quasars
Michele Fumagalli, Miroslava Dessauges-Zavadsky, Amy Furniss, J., Xavier Prochaska, David Williams, Kyle Kaplan, and Matthew Hogan

TL;DR
This study investigates the molecular gas content in BL Lac objects compared to quasars using CO line observations, revealing a deficiency in BL Lacs that impacts redshift determination and understanding of host galaxy properties.
Contribution
The paper presents the first pilot observations of CO lines in BL Lac objects, demonstrating the low molecular gas content and its implications for redshift measurement and galaxy evolution.
Findings
Detection of molecular gas in 1ES 1959+650 with large uncertainty
Upper limits on molecular gas mass in W Comae and RGB J0710+591
BL Lac objects have less molecular gas than quasars
Abstract
BL Lacertae (Lac) objects that are detected at very-high energies (VHE) are of fundamental importance to study multiple astrophysical processes, including the physics of jets, the properties of the extragalactic background light and the strength of the intergalactic magnetic field. Unfortunately, since most blazars have featureless optical spectra that preclude a redshift determination, a substantial fraction of these VHE extragalactic sources cannot be used for cosmological studies. To assess whether molecular lines are a viable way to establish distances, we have undertaken a pilot program at the IRAM 30m telescope to search for CO lines in three BL Lac objects with known redshifts. We report a positive detection of M_H2 ~ 3x10^8 Msun toward 1ES 1959+650, but due to the poor quality of the baseline, this value is affected by a large systematic uncertainty. For the remaining two…
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