The preferentially magnified active nucleus in IRAS F10214+4724 - II. Spatially resolved cold molecular gas
R.P. Deane, I. Heywood, S. Rawlings, P.J. Marshall

TL;DR
This study uses JVLA observations to spatially resolve cold molecular gas in IRAS F10214+4724, revealing lensing effects on different emission regions and suggesting a larger total molecular gas mass than previously estimated.
Contribution
It provides the first spatially resolved CO (1-0) observations of IRAS F10214+4724, analyzing lensing effects and proposing a more accurate molecular gas mass estimate.
Findings
Detection of a CO (1-0) counter-image at 3-sigma
Evidence for a rotating disk structure in the gas
Total molecular gas mass estimated at ~1.2 x 10^10 M_sun
Abstract
We present JVLA observations of the cold (CO (1-0)) molecular gas in IRAS F10214+4724, a lensed ULIRG at z=2.3 with an obscured active nucleus. The galaxy is spatially and spectrally well-resolved in the CO (1-0) emission line. A CO (1-0) counter-image is detected at the 3-sigma level. Five of the 42 km/s channels (with >5-sigma detections) are mapped back into the source plane and their total magnification posterior PDFs sampled. This reveals a roughly linear arrangement, tentatively a rotating disk. We derive a molecular gas mass of M_gas = 1.2 +- 0.2 x 10^10 M_sun, assuming a ULIRG L_{CO}-to-M_{gas} conversion ratio of \alpha = 0.8 M_sun / (K km/s pc^2) that agrees well with the derived range of \alpha = 0.3 - 1.3 for separate dynamical mass estimates at assumed inclinations of i = 90 - 30 degrees. Based on the AGN and CO (1-0) peak emission positions and the lens model, we predict a…
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