ATCA detections of massive molecular gas reservoirs in dusty, high-z radio galaxies
I. Heywood, Y. Contreras, D. J. B. Smith, A. Cooray, L. Dunne, L., Gomez, E. Ibar, R. J. Ivison, M. J. Jarvis, M. J. Michalowski, D. A. Riechers, and P. van der Werf

TL;DR
This study detects massive molecular gas reservoirs in two high-redshift radio galaxies, revealing their large gas and dust content, and suggesting they are typical yet massive systems contributing significantly to high-redshift radio emission.
Contribution
First detection of large molecular gas reservoirs in high-z radio galaxies using ATCA, linking their gas content to star formation and galaxy evolution.
Findings
Massive molecular gas reservoirs (~10^11 M_solar) detected in two high-z radio galaxies.
Broad CO line profiles suggest rotating disks or ongoing mergers.
Gas depletion timescales around 100 million years.
Abstract
Observations using the 7 mm receiver system on the Australia Telescope Compact Array have revealed large reservoirs of molecular gas in two high-redshift radio galaxies: HATLAS J090426.9+015448 (z = 2.37) and HATLAS J140930.4+003803 (z = 2.04). Optically the targets are very faint, and spectroscopy classifies them as narrow-line radio galaxies. In addition to harbouring an active galactic nucleus the targets share many characteristics of sub-mm galaxies. Far-infrared data from Herschel-ATLAS suggest high levels of dust (>10^9 M_solar) and a correspondingly large amount of obscured star formation (~1000 M_solar / yr). The molecular gas is traced via the J = 1-0 transition of 12CO, its luminosity implying total H_2 masses of (1.7 +/- 0.3) x 10^11 and (9.5 +/- 2.4) x 10^10 (alpha_CO/0.8) M_solar in HATLAS J090426.9+015448 and HATLAS J140930.4+003803 respectively. Both galaxies exhibit…
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