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2020
DOI: 10.48550/arxiv.2010.16231
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Turbulent Gas in Lensed Planck-selected Starbursts at redshifts 1-3.5

Kevin C. Harrington,
Axel Weiss,
Min S. Yun
et al.

Abstract: Dusty star-forming galaxies at high redshift (1 < z < 3) represent the most intense star-forming regions in the Universe. Key aspects to these processes are the gas heating and cooling mechanisms. Although it is well known that these galaxies are gas-rich, little is known about the gas excitation conditions, as only few detailed radiative transfer studies have been carried out due to a lack of line detections per galaxy. Here we examine these processes in a sample of 24 strongly lensed star-forming galaxies id… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(2 citation statements)
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References 325 publications
(581 reference statements)
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“…Despite its narrow linewidth, the total cold gas reservoir inferred from the CO(1-0) emission in SMM J13120 has a mass of (13 ± 3) × 10 10 M , and is extended over ∼16 kpc in diameter. Although the revised CO(1-0) luminosity is significantly lower than previous estimates (R11), we additionally find that the CO SLED still suggests the presence of two gas components to account for all the recovered CO(1-0) emission, including a diffuse component with T kin = 25±5 K and a warmer, denser component with T kin = 40±5 K. These findings are in line with other studies of high-z systems with available low-J CO detections (see e.g., Ivison et al 2011;Riechers et al 2011;Hodge et al 2013, for unlensed galaxies, and Yang et al 2017;Cañameras et al 2018;Harrington et al 2020, for lensed sources), reinforcing the importance of low-J CO observations for establishing the nature of the molecular gas reservoirs in high-z systems and their role in early galaxy evolution.…”
Section: Gas Excitationsupporting
confidence: 90%
“…Despite its narrow linewidth, the total cold gas reservoir inferred from the CO(1-0) emission in SMM J13120 has a mass of (13 ± 3) × 10 10 M , and is extended over ∼16 kpc in diameter. Although the revised CO(1-0) luminosity is significantly lower than previous estimates (R11), we additionally find that the CO SLED still suggests the presence of two gas components to account for all the recovered CO(1-0) emission, including a diffuse component with T kin = 25±5 K and a warmer, denser component with T kin = 40±5 K. These findings are in line with other studies of high-z systems with available low-J CO detections (see e.g., Ivison et al 2011;Riechers et al 2011;Hodge et al 2013, for unlensed galaxies, and Yang et al 2017;Cañameras et al 2018;Harrington et al 2020, for lensed sources), reinforcing the importance of low-J CO observations for establishing the nature of the molecular gas reservoirs in high-z systems and their role in early galaxy evolution.…”
Section: Gas Excitationsupporting
confidence: 90%
“…Yet their optical to mid-IR SEDs are usually not well sampled. Harrington et al (2020) present a study of CO excitation and far-IR/(sub-)mm dust SED modeling in strongly lensed galaxies, based on a similar gas density PDF modeling.…”
Section: High-z Sb Smgsmentioning
confidence: 99%