Discovery of a Perseus-like cloud in the early Universe: HI-to-H2 transition, carbon monoxide and small dust grains at zabs=2.53 towards the quasar J0000+0048
P. Noterdaeme, J.-K. Krogager, S. Balashev, J. Ge, N. Gupta, T., Kr\"uhler, C. Ledoux, M. T. Murphy, I. P\^aris, P. Petitjean, H. Rahmani, R., Srianand, W. Ubachs

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a high-redshift molecular cloud with properties similar to nearby Perseus molecular regions, revealing insights into the HI-to-H2 transition, dust, and cosmic microwave background at z=2.53.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed analysis of a Perseus-like molecular cloud at high redshift, including its physical conditions, chemical composition, and dust properties.
Findings
Highest molecular fraction observed in a high-z system (~50%)
Detected CO molecules and small dust grains similar to local diffuse clouds
Measured CMB temperature at z=2.53 consistent with cosmological predictions
Abstract
We present the discovery of a molecular cloud at zabs=2.5255 along the line of sight to the quasar J0000+0048. We perform a detailed analysis of the absorption lines from ionic, neutral atomic and molecular species in different excitation levels, as well as the broad-band dust extinction. We find that the absorber classifies as a Damped Lyman-alpha system (DLA) with logN(HI)(cm^-2)=20.8+/-0.1. The DLA has super-Solar metallicity with a depletion pattern typical of cold gas and an overall molecular fraction ~50%. This is the highest f-value observed to date in a high-z intervening system. Most of the molecular hydrogen arises from a clearly identified narrow (b~0.7 km/s), cold component in which CO molecules are also found, with logN(CO)~15. We study the chemical and physical conditions in the cold gas. We find that the line of sight probes the gas deep after the HI-to-H2 transition in a…
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