A comprehensive view of the interstellar medium in a quasar host galaxy at z~6.4
Roberto Decarli, Antonio Pensabene, Tanio Diaz-Santos, Carl, Ferkinhoff, Michael A. Strauss, Bram P. Venemans, Fabian Walter, Eduardo, Banados, Frank Bertoldi, Xiaohui Fan, Emanuele Paolo Farina, Dominik A., Riechers, Hans-Walter Rix, Ran Wang

TL;DR
This study provides a detailed multi-line analysis of the interstellar medium in a z~6.4 quasar host galaxy, revealing its physical conditions, gas phases, and star formation activity during the early universe.
Contribution
It presents the first comprehensive multi-line observational characterization of the interstellar medium in a galaxy at cosmic dawn, combining various tracers to understand its properties.
Findings
Ionized gas accounts for about one third of the total gas mass.
High-density ionized regions are similar to HII regions with B-star radiation.
Evidence suggests star formation influences molecular excitation and possible outflow shocks.
Abstract
Characterizing the physical conditions (density, temperature, ionization state, metallicity, etc) of the interstellar medium is critical to our understanding of the formation and evolution of galaxies. Here we present a multi-line study of the interstellar medium in the host galaxy of a quasar at z~6.4, i.e., when the universe was 840 Myr old. This galaxy is one of the most active and massive objects emerging from the dark ages, and therefore represents a benchmark for models of the early formation of massive galaxies. We used the Atacama Large Millimeter Array to target an ensemble of tracers of ionized, neutral, and molecular gas, namely the fine-structure lines: [OIII] 88m, [NII] 122m, [CII] 158m, and [CI] 370m and the rotational transitions of CO(7-6), CO(15-14), CO(16-15), and CO(19-18); OH 163.1m and 163.4m; and HO 3(0,3)-2(1,2), 3(3,1)-4(0,4),…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
