An ALMA survey of CO in submillimetre galaxies: companions, triggering, and the environment in blended sources
J. L. Wardlow (1), J. M. Simpson (2), Ian Smail (1), A. M. Swinbank, (1), A. W. Blain (3), W. N. Brandt (4), S. C. Chapman (5), Chian-Chou Chen, (6), E. A. Cooke (1), H. Dannerbauer (7,8), B. Gullberg (1), J. A. Hodge (9),, R. J. Ivison (6,10), K. K. Knudsen (11)

TL;DR
This study uses ALMA to observe CO emissions in blended submillimetre galaxies, revealing that most are not physically associated but often have close companions, indicating complex environments influencing star formation.
Contribution
First ALMA survey of CO in blended SMGs showing that most are not physically associated, but some have close companions, shedding light on their environment and triggering mechanisms.
Findings
64% of SMGs are not physically associated.
50% of fields contain CO-emitting, submillimetre-faint sources.
21% of SMGs have close, kinematically similar companions.
Abstract
We present ALMA observations of the mid-J 12CO emission from six single-dish selected 870-micron sources in the Extended Chandra Deep Field-South (ECDFS) and UKIDSS Ultra-Deep Survey (UDS) fields. These six single-dish submillimetre sources were selected based on previous ALMA continuum observations, which showed that each comprised a blend of emission from two or more individual submillimetre galaxies (SMGs), separated on 5--10 arcsec scales. The six single-dish submillimetre sources targeted correspond to a total of 14 individual SMGs, of which seven have previously-measured robust optical/near-infrared spectroscopic redshifts, which were used to tune our ALMA observations. We detect CO(3-2) or CO(4-3) at z=2.3--3.7 in seven of the 14 SMGs, and in addition serendipitously detect line emission from three gas-rich companion galaxies, as well as identify four new 3.3-mm selected…
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