# VALES: I. The molecular gas content in star-forming dusty H-ATLAS   galaxies up to z=0.35

**Authors:** V. Villanueva, E. Ibar, T. M. Hughes, M. A. Lara-L\'opez, L. Dunne, S., Eales, R. J. Ivison, M. Aravena, M. Baes, N. Bourne, P. Cassata, A. Cooray,, H. Dannerbauer, L. J. M. Davies, S. P. Driver, S. Dye, C. Furlanetto, R., Herrera-Camus, S. J. Maddox, M. J. Michalowski, J. Molina, D. Riechers, A. E., Sansom, M. W. L. Smith, G. Rodighiero, E. Valiante, P. van der Werf

arXiv: 1705.09826 · 2017-07-26

## TL;DR

This study uses ALMA observations to analyze the molecular gas content and star formation efficiency in 67 dusty star-forming galaxies up to redshift 0.35, revealing insights into galaxy evolution and gas dynamics.

## Contribution

It provides the first detailed molecular gas measurements for a large sample of nearby dusty galaxies, expanding understanding of star formation and gas properties at low redshift.

## Key findings

- Molecular gas is on average 0.6 times more compact than stellar component.
- Established a global Schmidt-Kennicutt relation for the sample.
-  Identified a rapid increase in gas content with redshift within z<0.35.

## Abstract

We present an extragalactic survey using observations from the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) to characterise galaxy populations up to $z=0.35$: the Valpara\'iso ALMA Line Emission Survey (VALES). We use ALMA Band-3 CO(1--0) observations to study the molecular gas content in a sample of 67 dusty normal star-forming galaxies selected from the $Herschel$ Astrophysical Terahertz Large Area Survey ($H$-ATLAS). We have spectrally detected 49 galaxies at $>5\sigma$ significance and 12 others are seen at low significance in stacked spectra. CO luminosities are in the range of $(0.03-1.31)\times10^{10}$ K km s$^{-1}$ pc$^2$, equivalent to $\log({\rm M_{gas}/M_{\odot}}) =8.9-10.9$ assuming an $\alpha_{\rm CO}$=4.6(K km s$^{-1}$ pc$^{2}$)$^{-1}$, which perfectly complements the parameter space previously explored with local and high-z normal galaxies. We compute the optical to CO size ratio for 21 galaxies resolved by ALMA at $\sim 3$."$5$ resolution (6.5 kpc), finding that the molecular gas is on average $\sim$ 0.6 times more compact than the stellar component. We obtain a global Schmidt-Kennicutt relation, given by $\log [\Sigma_{\rm SFR}/({\rm M_{\odot} yr^{-1}kpc^{-2}})]=(1.26 \pm 0.02) \times \log [\Sigma_{\rm M_{H2}}/({\rm M_{\odot}\,pc^{-2}})]-(3.6 \pm 0.2)$. We find a significant fraction of galaxies lying at `intermediate efficiencies' between a long-standing mode of star-formation activity and a starburst, specially at $\rm L_{IR}=10^{11-12} L_{\odot}$. Combining our observations with data taken from the literature, we propose that star formation efficiencies can be parameterised by $\log [{\rm SFR/M_{H2}}]=0.19 \times {\rm (\log {L_{IR}}-11.45)}-8.26-0.41 \times \arctan[-4.84 (\log {\rm L_{IR}}-11.45) ]$. Within the redshift range we explore ($z<0.35$), we identify a rapid increase of the gas content as a function of redshift.

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1705.09826