Cosmic evolution of the H2 mass density and the epoch of molecular gas
T. K. Garratt, K. E. K. Coppin, J. E. Geach, O. Almaini, W. G., Hartley, D. T. Maltby, C. J. Simpson, A. Wilkinson, C. J. Conselice, M., Franco, R. J. Ivison, M. P. Koprowski, C. C. Lovell, A. Pope, D. Scott, P., van der Werf

TL;DR
This study measures the evolution of molecular hydrogen density in the universe up to redshift 2.5 using a large galaxy sample, revealing that the peak of molecular gas coincides with the star formation peak and is driven by gas supply rather than efficiency.
Contribution
It provides the first large-scale empirical constraints on $ ho_{H_2}$ evolution up to z≈2.5, significantly reducing uncertainties and linking gas content to star formation history.
Findings
$ ho_{H_2}$ peaks at z≈2, coinciding with star formation peak.
The evolution of $ ho_{H_2}$ can be modeled by star-formation rate density inversions.
Gas supply, not star-formation efficiency, primarily drives the star formation peak.
Abstract
We present new empirical constraints on the evolution of , the cosmological mass density of molecular hydrogen, back to . We employ a statistical approach measuring the average observed flux density of near-infrared selected galaxies as a function of redshift. The redshift range considered corresponds to a span where the band probes the Rayleigh-Jeans tail of thermal dust emission in the rest-frame, and can therefore be used as an estimate of the mass of the interstellar medium (ISM). Our sample comprises of galaxies in the UKIDSS-UDS field with near-infrared magnitudes mag and photometric redshifts with corresponding probability distribution functions derived from deep 12-band photometry. With a sample approximately 2 orders of magnitude larger than in previous works we significantly…
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