Deep observations of CO line emission from star-forming galaxies in a cluster candidate at z=1.5
M. Aravena, C. L. Carilli, M. Salvato, M. Tanaka, L. Lentati, E., Schinnerer, F. Walter, D. Riechers, V. Smolcic, P. Capak, H. Aussel, F., Bertoldi, S. C. Chapman, D. Farrah, A. Finoguenov, E. Le Floc'h, D. Lutz, G., Magdis, S. Oliver, L. Riguccini, S. Berta, B. Magnelli

TL;DR
This study uses deep JVLA observations to detect CO line emission from galaxies in a candidate cluster at z=1.5, revealing new insights into galaxy properties and the CO luminosity function at high redshift.
Contribution
It presents the first deep CO observations of a galaxy cluster candidate at z=1.5, identifying new CO emitters and comparing their abundance with models and previous surveys.
Findings
Detected CO emission in 2 galaxies at 3-4 sigma significance.
Identified 2 additional candidate CO emitters with >4 sigma peaks.
Found that the space density of CO emitters may be underestimated in current models.
Abstract
We report results from a deep Jansky Very Large Array (JVLA) search for CO 1-0 line emission from galaxies in a candidate galaxy cluster at z~1.55 in the COSMOS field. We target 4 galaxies with optical spectroscopic redshifts in the range z=1.47-1.59. Two of these 4 galaxies, ID51613 and ID51813, are nominally detected in CO line emission at the 3-4 sigma level. We find CO luminosities of 2.4x10^10 K km/s pc^2 and 1.3x10^10 K km/s pc^2, respectively. Taking advantage from the clustering and 2-GHz bandwidth of the JVLA, we perform a search for emission lines in the proximity of optical sources within the field of view of our observations. We limit our search to galaxies with K<23.5 (AB) and z_phot=1.2-1.8. We find 2 bright optical galaxies to be associated with significant emission line peaks (>4 sigma) in the data cube, which we identify with the CO line emission. To test the…
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