Early Science with the Large Millimeter Telescope: CO and [C II] Emission in the z=4.3 AzTEC J095942.9+022938 (COSMOS AzTEC-1)
Min S. Yun, I. Aretxaga, M. A. Gurwell, D. H. Hughes, A. Monta\~na, G., Narayanan, D. Rosa Gonz\'alez, D. S\'anchez-Arg\"uelles, F. P. Schloerb, R., L. Snell, O. Vega, G. W. Wilson, M. Zeballos, M. Chavez, J. R. Cybulski, T., D\'iaz-Santos, V. De la Luz, N. Erickson, D. Ferrusca

TL;DR
This study reports the first spectroscopic redshift of the bright, dusty starburst galaxy AzTEC COSMOS-1 at z=4.342, using CO and [C II] emission lines, revealing its molecular gas content, dynamics, and star formation properties.
Contribution
It provides the first spectroscopic redshift and detailed physical characterization of AzTEC COSMOS-1 using CO and [C II] lines, advancing understanding of high-redshift starburst galaxies.
Findings
Redshift confirmed at z=4.342 from CO and [C II] lines.
High infrared luminosity and star formation rate of 1300 M_sun/yr.
Compact gas disk nearly face-on, explaining bright stellar light.
Abstract
Measuring redshifted CO line emission is an unambiguous method for obtaining an accurate redshift and total cold gas content of optically faint, dusty starburst systems. Here, we report the first successful spectroscopic redshift determination of AzTEC J095942.9+022938 ("COSMOS AzTEC-1"), the brightest 1.1mm continuum source found in the AzTEC/JCMT survey (Scott et al. 2008), through a clear detection of the redshifted CO (4-3) and CO (5-4) lines using the Redshift Search Receiver on the Large Millimeter Telescope. The CO redshift of is confirmed by the detection of the redshifted 158 micron [C II] line using the Submillimeter Array. The new redshift and Herschel photometry yield and yr. Its molecular gas mass derived using the ULIRG conversion factor is while…
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