The nature of H{\sc i}-absorption-selected galaxies at $z \approx 4$
B. Kaur (1), N. Kanekar (1), M. Rafelski (2,3), M. Neeleman (4), M., Revalski (2), J. X. Prochaska (5,6) ((1) National Centre for Radio, Astrophysics, India, (2) Space Telescope Science Institute, USA, (3) Johns, Hopkins University, USA, (4) Max-Planck-Institut for Astronomie

TL;DR
This study investigates the properties of HI-selected galaxies at z≈4, using multi-wavelength observations to measure their molecular gas content, stellar emission, and star formation, revealing their similarities and differences with typical high-redshift galaxies.
Contribution
First detection of stellar continuum in HI-selected galaxies at z≈4, and constraints on their molecular gas content through CO observations, providing new insights into early galaxy evolution.
Findings
No significant CO emission detected, setting upper limits on molecular gas mass.
NUV emission detected in four galaxies, indicating ongoing star formation.
NUV emission is more extended than in typical main-sequence galaxies at similar redshifts.
Abstract
We report a Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array (JVLA) search for redshifted CO(1-0) or CO(2-1) emission, and a Hubble Space Telescope Wide Field Camera~3 (HST-WFC3) search for rest-frame near-ultraviolet (NUV) stellar emission, from seven HI-selected galaxies associated with high-metallicity ([M/H]~) damped Ly absorbers (DLAs) at . The galaxies were earlier identified by ALMA imaging of their [CII]~158m emission. We also used the JVLA to search for CO(2-1) emission from the field of a low-metallicity ([M/H]~) DLA at . No statistically significant CO emission is detected from any of the galaxies, yielding upper limits of on their molecular gas mass. We detect rest-frame NUV emission from four of the seven [CII]~158m-emitting galaxies, the first detections of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · CCD and CMOS Imaging Sensors · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
