The ALMA Spectroscopic Survey in the HUDF: Constraining the Molecular Content at $\log{(M_*/M_\odot)} \sim 9.5$ with CO stacking of MUSE detected $z\sim1.5$ Galaxies
Hanae Inami, Roberto Decarli, Fabian Walter, Axel Weiss, Chris, Carilli, Manuel Aravena, Leindert Boogaard, Jorge Gonz\'alez-L\'opez, Gerg\"o, Popping, Elisabete da Cunha, Roland Bacon, Franz Bauer, Thierry Contini,, Paulo C. Cortes, Pierre Cox, Emanuele Daddi

TL;DR
This study uses CO line stacking in ALMA and MUSE data to estimate molecular gas content in $z ext{~}1.5$ galaxies, revealing how gas mass varies with stellar mass and confirming the effectiveness of multi-wavelength surveys.
Contribution
It provides new constraints on molecular gas in low-mass galaxies at $z ext{~}1.5$ using CO stacking, demonstrating the synergy of ALMA and MUSE data.
Findings
Molecular gas mass decreases with stellar mass down to $ ext{log}(M_*/M_igodot)=9.0$.
CO(2-1) emission detected in galaxies with $ ext{log}(M_*/M_igodot)=10.0$.
Molecular gas density at $z ext{~}1.5$ is consistent across different CO selections.
Abstract
We report molecular gas mass estimates obtained from a stacking analysis of CO line emission in the ALMA Spectroscopic Survey (ASPECS) using the spectroscopic redshifts from the optical integral field spectroscopic survey by the Multi Unit Spectroscopic Explorer (MUSE) of the {\it Hubble} Ultra Deep Field (HUDF). Stacking was performed on subsets of the sample of galaxies classified by their stellar mass and position relative to the main-sequence relation (on, above, below). Among all the CO emission lines, from \cotwoone to CO(6-5), with redshifts accessible via the ASPECS Band~3 and the MUSE data, \cotwoone provides the strongest constraints on the molecular gas content. We detect \cotwoone emission in galaxies down to stellar masses of . Below this stellar mass, we present a new constraint on the molecular gas content of main-sequence galaxies by…
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