A Molecular gas rich GRB host galaxy at the peak of cosmic star formation
M. Arabsalmani, E. Le Floc'h, H. Dannerbauer, C. Feruglio, E. Daddi,, L. Ciesla, V. Charmandaris, J. Japelj, S. D. Vergani, P.-A. Duc, S. Basa, F., Bournaud, D. Elbaz

TL;DR
This study reports the first detection of molecular gas in a GRB host galaxy beyond redshift 1, revealing it to be gas-rich and actively star-forming, challenging previous notions of molecular gas deficiency in such galaxies.
Contribution
It provides the first emission detection of molecular gas in a high-redshift GRB host, showing it is gas-rich and has typical star formation properties, countering prior claims of deficiency.
Findings
Molecular gas mass of 1.1 x 10^11 M_sun in the host galaxy.
Gas depletion timescale of 0.43 Gyr, typical for similar galaxies.
Hα emission shows two components, indicating possible outflows or interactions.
Abstract
We report the detection of the CO(3-2) emission line from the host galaxy of Gamma Ray Burst (GRB) 080207 at = 2.086. This is the first detection of molecular gas in emission from a GRB host galaxy beyond redshift 1. We find this galaxy to be rich in molecular gas with a mass of assuming 4.36 . The molecular gas mass fraction of the galaxy is 0.5, typical of star forming galaxies (SFGs) with similar stellar masses and redshifts. With a of 260 , we measure a molecular-gas-depletion timescale of 0.43 Gyr, near the peak of the depletion timescale distribution of SFGs at similar redshifts. Our findings are therefore in contradiction with the proposed molecular gas deficiency in GRB host galaxies. We argue that the reported molecular gas…
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