The Ratio of CO to Total Gas Mass in High Redshift Galaxies
Natalie Mashian, Amiel Sternberg, Abraham Loeb

TL;DR
This study analyzes the interstellar medium in a high-redshift galaxy using CO and [CII] emission lines, employing LVG modeling to estimate gas mass ratios and assess different physical configurations.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive LVG modeling approach to determine the CO to total gas mass ratio in high-redshift galaxies, considering various spatial and physical arrangements of gas components.
Findings
Uniformly mixed gas model fits best with ΛCDM constraints.
Estimated CO-to-H2 mass-to-luminosity ratio is similar to ULIRG values.
Model with unvirialized molecular clouds aligns with cosmological expectations.
Abstract
Walter et al. (20012) have recently identified the J=6-5, 5-4, and 2-1 CO rotational emission lines, and [C_{II}] fine-structure emission line from the star-forming interstellar medium in the high-redshift submillimeter source HDF 850.1, at z = 5.183. We employ large velocity gradient (LVG) modeling to analyze the spectra of this source assuming the [C_{II}] and CO emissions originate from (i) separate unvirialized regions, (ii) separate virialized regions, (iii) uniformly mixed unvirialized region, and (iv) uniformly mixed virialized regions. We present the best fit set of parameters, including for each case the ratio between the total hydrogen/helium gas mass and the CO(1-0) line luminosity. We also present computations of the ratio of H_{2} mass to [C_{II}] line-luminosity for optically thin conditions, for a range of gas temperatures and densities, for direct conversion of…
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