COLDz: Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array discovery of a gas-rich galaxy in COSMOS
L. Lentati, J. Wagg, C. L. Carilli, D. Riechers, P. Capak, F. Walter,, M. Aravena, E. da Cunha, J. A. Hodge, R. J. Ivison, I. Smail, C. Sharon, E., Daddi, R. Decarli, M. Dickinson, M. Sargent, N. Scoville, and V. Smolcic

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a gas-rich, star-forming galaxy at redshift 2.48 using the VLA, demonstrating the effectiveness of molecular line surveys in identifying distant, dust-obscured galaxies.
Contribution
First detection of a high-redshift, gas-rich galaxy via CO(1-0) emission in the COLDz survey, showcasing the VLA's capabilities for unbiased molecular line searches.
Findings
Detected CO(1-0) emission at z=2.48 in COSMOS field
Estimated molecular gas mass of (2-8) x 10^{10} solar masses
Star formation rate of approximately 250 solar masses per year
Abstract
The broad spectral bandwidth at mm and cm-wavelengths provided by the recent upgrades to the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array (VLA) has made it possible to conduct unbiased searches for molecular CO line emission at redshifts, z > 1.31. We present the discovery of a gas-rich, star-forming galaxy at z = 2.48, through the detection of CO(1-0) line emission in the COLDz survey, through a sensitive, Ka-band (31 to 39 GHz) VLA survey of a 6.5 square arcminute region of the COSMOS field. We argue that the broad line (FWHM ~570 +/- 80 km/s) is most likely to be CO(1-0) at z=2.48, as the integrated emission is spatially coincident with an infrared-detected galaxy with a photometric redshift estimate of z = 3.2 +/- 0.4. The CO(1-0) line luminosity is L'_CO = (2.2 +/- 0.3) x 10^{10} K km/s pc^2, suggesting a cold molecular gas mass of M_gas ~ (2 - 8)x10^{10}M_solar depending on the assumed value…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
