COALAS II. Extended molecular gas reservoirs are common in a distant, forming galaxy cluster
Zhengyi Chen, Helmut Dannerbauer, Matthew Lehnert, Bjorn Emonts,, Qiusheng Gu, James R Allison, Jaclyn Champagne, Nina Hatch, Balthasar, Inderm\"uehle, Ray Norris, Jos\'e Manuel P\'erez-Mart\'inez, Huub, R\"ottgering, Paolo Serra, Nick Seymour, Rhythm Shimakawa, Alasdair Thomson

TL;DR
This study reveals that large, extended molecular gas reservoirs are common in a distant galaxy protocluster, indicating significant gas distribution on super-galactic scales and their association with dense environments.
Contribution
Developed a novel method to identify extended molecular gas reservoirs in high-redshift protoclusters, revealing their high frequency and environmental dependence.
Findings
At least 30% of CO emitters have extended gas reservoirs.
Extended reservoirs tend to be in denser regions of the protocluster.
Large reservoirs are mainly located in the core region of the protocluster.
Abstract
This paper presents the results of 475 hours of interferometric observations with the Australia Telescope Compact Array towards the Spiderweb protocluster at \(z=2.16\). We search for large, extended molecular gas reservoirs among 46 previously detected CO(1-0) emitters, employing a customised method we developed. Based on the CO emission images and position-velocity diagrams, as well as the ranking of sources using a binary weighting of six different criteria, we have identified 14 robust and 7 tentative candidates that exhibit large extended molecular gas reservoirs. These extended reservoirs are defined as having sizes greater than 40 kpc or super-galactic scale. This result suggests a high frequency of extended gas reservoirs, comprising at least \(30 \%\) of our CO-selected sample. An environmental study of the candidates is carried out based on N-th nearest neighbour and we find…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpectroscopy and Laser Applications · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
