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The implications of the surprising existence of a large, massive CO disk in a distant protocluster

Authors :
Dannerbauer, H.
Lehnert, M. D.
Emonts, B. H. C.
Ziegler, B.
Altieri, B.
De Breuck, C.
Hatch, N.
Kodama, T.
Koyama, Y.
Kurk, J. D.
Matiz, T.
Miley, G.
Narayanan, D.
Norris, R.
Overzier, R.
Roettgering, H. J. A.
Sargent, M.
Seymour, N.
Tanaka, M.
Valtchanov, I.
Wylezalek, D.
Dannerbauer, H.
Lehnert, M. D.
Emonts, B. H. C.
Ziegler, B.
Altieri, B.
De Breuck, C.
Hatch, N.
Kodama, T.
Koyama, Y.
Kurk, J. D.
Matiz, T.
Miley, G.
Narayanan, D.
Norris, R.
Overzier, R.
Roettgering, H. J. A.
Sargent, M.
Seymour, N.
Tanaka, M.
Valtchanov, I.
Wylezalek, D.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

It is not yet known if the properties of molecular gas in distant protocluster galaxies are significantly affected by their environment as galaxies are in local clusters. Through a deep, 64 hours of effective on-source integration with the Australian Telescope Compact Array (ATCA), we discovered a massive, M_mol=2.0+-0.2x10^11 M_sun, extended, ~40 kpc, CO(1-0)-emitting disk in the protocluster surrounding the radio galaxy, MRC1138-262. The galaxy, at z_CO=2.1478, is a clumpy, massive disk galaxy, M_star~5x10^11 M_sun, which lies 250 kpc in projection from MRC1138-262 and is a known H-alpha emitter, HAE229. HAE229 has a molecular gas fraction of ~30%. The CO emission has a kinematic gradient along its major axis, centered on the highest surface brightness rest-frame optical emission, consistent with HAE229 being a rotating disk. Surprisingly, a significant fraction of the CO emission lies outside of the UV/optical emission. In spite of this, HAE229 follows the same relation between star-formation rate and molecular gas mass as normal field galaxies. HAE229 is the first CO(1-0) detection of an ordinary, star-forming galaxy in a protocluster. We compare a sample of cluster members at z>0.4 that are detected in low-order CO transitions with a similar sample of sources drawn from the field. We confirm findings that the CO-luminosity and FWHM are correlated in starbursts and show that this relation is valid for normal high-z galaxies as well as those in overdensities. We do not find a clear dichotomy in the integrated Schmidt-Kennicutt relation for protocluster and field galaxies. Not finding any environmental dependence in the "star-formation efficiency" or the molecular gas content, especially for such an extended CO disk, suggests that environmentally-specific processes such as ram pressure stripping are not operating efficiently in (proto)clusters. (abridged)<br />Comment: Accepted by A&A. 15 pages, 8 figures and 4 tables

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1363475370
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1051.0004-6361.201730449