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The ALMA Spectroscopic Survey in the HUDF: Multi-band constraints on line luminosity functions and the cosmic density of molecular gas

Authors :
Decarli, Roberto
Aravena, Manuel
Boogaard, Leindert
Carilli, Chris
González-López, Jorge
Walter, Fabian
Cortes, Paulo C.
Cox, Pierre
da Cunha, Elisabete
Daddi, Emanuele
Díaz-Santos, Tanio
Hodge, Jacqueline A.
Inami, Hanae
Neeleman, Marcel
Novak, Mladen
Oesch, Pascal
Popping, Gergö
Riechers, Dominik
Smail, Ian
Uzgil, Bade
van der Werf, Paul
Wagg, Jeff
Weiss, Axel
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

We present a CO and atomic fine-structure line luminosity function analysis using the ALMA Spectroscopic Survey in the Hubble Ultra Deep Field (ASPECS). ASPECS consists of two spatially-overlapping mosaics that cover the entire ALMA 3mm and 1.2mm bands. We combine the results of a line candidate search of the 1.2mm data cube with those previously obtained from the 3mm cube. Our analysis shows that $\sim$80% of the line flux observed at 3mm arises from CO(2-1) or CO(3-2) emitters at $z$=1-3 (`cosmic noon'). At 1.2mm, more than half of the line flux arises from intermediate-J CO transitions ($J_{\rm up}$=3-6); $\sim12$% from neutral carbon lines; and $< 1$% from singly-ionized carbon, [CII]. This implies that future [CII] intensity mapping surveys in the epoch of reionization will need to account for a highly significant CO foreground. The CO luminosity functions probed at 1.2mm show a decrease in the number density at a given line luminosity (in units of $L'$) at increasing $J_{\rm up}$ and redshift. Comparisons between the CO luminosity functions for different CO transitions at a fixed redshift reveal sub-thermal conditions on average in galaxies up to $z\sim 4$. In addition, the comparison of the CO luminosity functions for the same transition at different redshifts reveals that the evolution is not driven by excitation. The cosmic density of molecular gas in galaxies, $\rho_{\rm H2}$, shows a redshift evolution with an increase from high redshift up to $z\sim1.5$ followed by a factor $\sim 6$ drop down to the present day. This is in qualitative agreement with the evolution of the cosmic star-formation rate density, suggesting that the molecular gas depletion time is approximately constant with redshift, after averaging over the star-forming galaxy population.<br />Comment: 23 pages, 11 figures, 5 tables. Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2009.10744
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/abaa3b