COALAS: I. ATCA CO(1-0) survey and luminosity function in the Spiderweb protocluster at z=2.16
S. Jin, H. Dannerbauer, B. Emonts, P. Serra, C. D. P. Lagos, A. P., Thomson, L. Bassini, M. Lehnert, J. R. Allison, J. B. Champagne, B., Indermuhle, R. P. Norris, N. Seymour, R. Shimakawa, C. M. Casey, C. De, Breuck, G. Drouart, N. Hatch, T. Kodama, Y. Koyama, P. Macgregor

TL;DR
This study presents the largest CO(1-0) molecular gas survey in a galaxy protocluster at z=2.16, revealing a high density of gas-rich galaxies, their distribution, and implications for cluster formation.
Contribution
It provides the first measurement of the CO luminosity function and molecular gas density in a protocluster environment at high redshift.
Findings
Overdensity of CO emitters indicating a super-protocluster or filamentary structure.
Majority of gas reservoirs are located outside the cluster core.
CO luminosity function is significantly higher than in field galaxies at similar redshift.
Abstract
We report a detailed CO(1-0) survey of a galaxy protocluster field at , based on 475 hours of observations with the Australia Telescope Compact Array. We constructed a large mosaic of 13 individual pointings, covering an area of 21 arcmin and km/s range in velocity. We obtain a robust sample of 46 CO(1-0) detections spanning , constituting the largest sample of molecular gas measurements in protoclusters to date. The CO emitters show an overdensity at , suggesting a galaxy super-protocluster or a protocluster connected to large-scale filaments with ~120 cMpc size. We find that 90% CO emitters have distances to the center galaxy, indicating that small area surveys would miss the majority of gas reservoirs in similar structures. Half of the CO emitters have velocities larger than escape velocities, which appears gravitationally…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Space Technology and Applications
