Molecular gas and dust in the highly magnified z = 2.8 galaxy behind the Bullet Cluster
Daniel Johansson, Cathy Horellou, Omar Lopez-Cruz, Sebastien Muller,, Mark Birkinshaw, John H. Black, Malcolm N. Bremer, William F. Wall, Frank, Bertoldi, Edgar Castillo, Hector Javier Ibarra-Medel

TL;DR
This study uses gravitational lensing to analyze the molecular gas and dust properties of a highly magnified, low-mass submillimeter galaxy at redshift 2.8, revealing its physical characteristics and potential as a typical high-redshift galaxy.
Contribution
First detailed molecular gas and dust analysis of a highly magnified, low-mass submm galaxy behind the Bullet Cluster, providing insights into typical high-redshift galaxy properties.
Findings
Detected CO(1-0) and CO(3-2) lines with high significance.
Derived molecular gas mass of approximately 1.8 billion solar masses.
Estimated dust temperature of 33 K and dust mass of 1.1×10^7 solar masses.
Abstract
The gravitational magnification provided by massive galaxy clusters makes it possible to probe the physical conditions in distant galaxies that are of lower luminosity than those in blank fields and likely more representative of the bulk of the high-redshift galaxy population. We aim to constrain the basic properties of molecular gas in a strongly magnified submm galaxy located behind the massive Bullet Cluster. This galaxy (SMM J0658) is split into three images, with a total magnification factor of almost 100. We used the Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA) to search for {12}CO(1--0) and {12}CO(3--2) line emission from SMM J0658. We also used the SABOCA bolometer camera on the Atacama Pathfinder EXperiment (APEX) telescope to measure the continuum emission at 350 micron. CO(1--0) and CO(3--2) are detected at 6.8 sigma and 7.5 sigma significance when the spectra toward the two…
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