PKSB1740-517: An ALMA view of the cold gas feeding a distant interacting young radio galaxy
J. R. Allison, E. K. Mahony, V. A. Moss, E. M. Sadler, M. T. Whiting,, R. F. Allison, J. Bland-Hawthorn, B. H. C. Emonts, C. D. P. Lagos, R., Morganti, G. Tremblay, M. Zwaan, C. S. Anderson, J. D. Bunton, M. A., Voronkov

TL;DR
This study uses ALMA to detect cold gas in a young, luminous radio galaxy undergoing tidal interaction, revealing a reservoir of molecular and atomic gas likely fueling its active nucleus.
Contribution
First detection of redshifted CO(2-1) absorption in a young radio galaxy, linking cold gas reservoirs to galaxy interactions and AGN triggering.
Findings
Cold gas reservoir of 10^7-10^8 solar masses near the nucleus.
Coincident HI 21-cm and molecular absorption profiles.
Evidence of a small, possibly tidally stripped, cold gas cloud.
Abstract
Cold neutral gas is a key ingredient for growing the stellar and central black hole mass in galaxies throughout cosmic history. We have used the Atacama Large Millimetre Array (ALMA) to detect a rare example of redshifted CO(2-1) absorption in PKS B1740-517, a young ( yr) and luminous ( erg s ) radio galaxy at that is undergoing a tidal interaction with at least one lower-mass companion. The coincident HI 21-cm and molecular absorption have very similar line profiles and reveal a reservoir of cold gas ( M), likely distributed in a disc or ring within a few kiloparsecs of the nucleus. A separate HI component is kinematically distinct and has a very narrow line width ( km s), consistent with a single diffuse cloud of…
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