The [C II] emission as a molecular gas mass tracer in galaxies at low and high redshift
A. Zanella, E. Daddi, G. Magdis, T. Diaz Santos, D. Cormier, D. Liu,, A. Cibinel, R. Gobat, M. Dickinson, M. Sargent, G. Popping, S. C. Madden, M., Bethermin, T. M. Hughes, F. Valentino, W. Rujopakarn, M. Pannella, F., Bournaud, F. Walter, T. Wang, D. Elbaz, R. T. Coogan

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that [C II] emission reliably traces molecular gas mass in galaxies across different redshifts and star formation modes, offering a universal method for estimating gas content in diverse galactic environments.
Contribution
It empirically establishes the [C II]-to-H2 conversion factor as largely independent of galaxy properties, supporting its use as a universal molecular gas tracer.
Findings
[C II] luminosity correlates with molecular gas mass with low deviation.
The [C II]-to-H2 conversion factor is approximately 30 Msun/Lsun.
[C II] emission extent matches optical sizes, indicating spatial correlation.
Abstract
We present ALMA Band 9 observations of the [C II]158um emission for a sample of 10 main-sequence galaxies at redshift z ~ 2, with typical stellar masses (log M*/Msun ~ 10.0 - 10.9) and star formation rates (~ 35 - 115 Msun/yr). Given the strong and well understood evolution of the interstellar medium from the present to z = 2, we investigate the behaviour of the [C II] emission and empirically identify its primary driver. We detect [C II] from six galaxies (four secure, two tentative) and estimate ensemble averages including non detections. The [C II]-to-infrared luminosity ratio (L[C II]/LIR) of our sample is similar to that of local main-sequence galaxies (~ 2 x 10^-3), and ~ 10 times higher than that of starbursts. The [C II] emission has an average spatial extent of 4 - 7 kpc, consistent with the optical size. Complementing our sample with literature data, we find that the [C II]…
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