The [CII] 158 $\mu$m emission line as a gas mass tracer in high redshift quiescent galaxies
C. D'Eugenio, E. Daddi, D. Liu, R. Gobat

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that the [CII] 158 μm emission line can effectively trace the residual gas in high-redshift quiescent galaxies, providing deeper constraints on their gas content than traditional methods.
Contribution
It introduces the use of the [CII] 158 μm line as a novel, more sensitive tracer for gas mass in high-z quiescent galaxies, surpassing previous molecular gas detection techniques.
Findings
Placed upper limits on molecular gas fractions in three high-z quiescent galaxies.
Found the deepest upper limit for ZF-COS-20115, indicating large scatter in gas content.
Highlighted current limitations and proposed improvements for future observations.
Abstract
Many efforts have been done in recent years to probe the gas fraction evolution of massive quiescent galaxies (QGs); however, a clear picture has not yet been established. Recent spectroscopic confirmations at z>3 offer the chance to measure the residual gas reservoirs of massive galaxies a few hundreds of Myr after their death and to study how fast quenching proceeds in a highly star-forming Universe. Even so, stringent constraints at z2 remain hardly accessible with ALMA when adopting molecular gas tracers commonly used for the quenched population. In this letter, we propose overcoming this impasse by using the carbon [CII] 158 m emission line to systematically probe the gaseous budget of unlensed QGs at z>2.8, when these galaxies could still host non-negligible star formation on an absolute scale and when the line becomes best observable with ALMA (Bands 8 and 7). So far…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Spectroscopy and Laser Applications · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
