Early Science with the Large Millimeter Telescope: COOL BUDHIES I - a pilot study of molecular and atomic gas at z~0.2
Ryan Cybulski (1), Min S. Yun (1), Neal Erickson (1), Victor De la Luz, (2), Gopal Narayanan (1), Alfredo Monta\~na (3, 4), David, S\'anchez-Arg\"ulles (3), Jorge A. Zavala (3), Milagros Zeballos (3), Aeree, Chung (5), Ximena Fern\'andez (6, 7), Jacqueline van Gorkom (6)

TL;DR
This pilot study used the Large Millimeter Telescope to measure molecular and atomic gas in 23 galaxies at z~0.2, revealing higher molecular gas content than expected from previous studies, influenced by selection effects.
Contribution
First measurement of molecular and atomic gas in galaxies at z~0.2 using LMT, providing new insights into gas content beyond the local universe.
Findings
Nine galaxies have reliable CO detections.
Sample shows higher molecular gas abundance than previous studies.
Results suggest possible selection bias or Eddington bias.
Abstract
An understanding of the mass build-up in galaxies over time necessitates tracing the evolution of cold gas (molecular and atomic) in galaxies. To that end, we have conducted a pilot study called CO Observations with the LMT of the Blind Ultra-Deep H I Environment Survey (COOL BUDHIES). We have observed 23 galaxies in and around the two clusters Abell 2192 (z = 0.188) and Abell 963 (z = 0.206), where 12 are cluster members and 11 are slightly in the foreground or background, using about 28 total hours on the Redshift Search Receiver (RSR) on the Large Millimeter Telescope (LMT) to measure the CO J = 1 --> 0 emission line and obtain molecular gas masses. These new observations provide a unique opportunity to probe both the molecular and atomic components of galaxies as a function of environment beyond the local Universe. For our sample of 23 galaxies, nine have reliable detections…
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.
