Evolution of the atomic and molecular gas content of galaxies in dark matter haloes
G. Popping, P.S. Behroozi, M.S. Peeples

TL;DR
This study develops a semi-empirical model linking galaxy gas content to halo mass and cosmic time, revealing how atomic and molecular gas evolve and influence star formation across redshifts.
Contribution
It introduces a novel semi-empirical framework combining galaxy abundance constraints with gas scaling relations to predict gas content evolution from z=0 to z=3.
Findings
H I mass decreases by ~0.2 dex since z=1.5
H2 mass decreases by over 1 dex since z=1.5
Galaxy gas fractions decline with stellar mass and time
Abstract
We present a semi-empirical model to infer the atomic and molecular hydrogen content of galaxies as a function of halo mass and time. Our model combines the SFR-halo mass-redshift relation (constrained by galaxy abundances) with inverted SFR-surface density relations to infer galaxy H I and H2 masses. We present gas scaling relations, gas fractions, and mass functions from z = 0 to z = 3 and the gas properties of galaxies as a function of their host halo masses. Predictions of our work include: 1) there is a ~ 0.2 dex decrease in the H I mass of galaxies as a function of their stellar mass since z = 1.5, whereas the H2 mass of galaxies decreases by > 1 dex over the same period. 2) galaxy cold gas fractions and H2 fractions decrease with increasing stellar mass and time. Galaxies with M* > 10^10 Msun are dominated by their stellar content at z < 1, whereas less-massive galaxies only…
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