Kiloparsec-scale Imaging of the CO(1-0)-traced Cold Molecular Gas Reservoir in a z ∼ 3.4 Submillimeter Galaxy

Author:

Frias Castillo MartaORCID,Rybak MatusORCID,Hodge JacquelineORCID,van der Werf PaulORCID,Riechers Dominik A.ORCID,Vieira Daniel,Calistro Rivera Gabriela,Martínez-Ramírez Laura N.,Walter FabianORCID,de Blok Erwin,Narayanan DesikaORCID,Wagg Jeff

Abstract

Abstract We present a high-resolution study of the cold molecular gas as traced by CO(1-0) in the unlensed z ∼ 3.4 submillimeter galaxy SMM J13120+4242, using multiconfiguration observations with the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array (JVLA). The gas reservoir, imaged on 0.″39 (∼3 kpc) scales, is resolved into two components separated by ∼11 kpc with a total extent of 16 ± 3 kpc. Despite the large spatial extent of the reservoir, the observations show a CO(1-0) FWHM linewidth of only 267 ± 64 km s−1. We derive a revised line luminosity of L CO ( 1 0 ) = (10 ± 3) × 1010 K km s−1 pc2 and a molecular gas mass of M gas = (13 ± 3)× 1010 (α CO/1) M . Despite the presence of a velocity gradient (consistent with previous resolved CO(6-5) imaging), the CO(1-0) imaging shows evidence for significant turbulent motions that are preventing the gas from fully settling into a disk. The system likely represents a merger in an advanced stage. Although the dynamical mass is highly uncertain, we use it to place an upper limit on the CO-to-H2 mass conversion factor α CO of 1.4. We revisit the SED fitting, finding that this galaxy lies on the very massive end of the main sequence at z = 3.4. Based on the low gas fraction, short gas depletion time, and evidence for a central AGN, we propose that SMM J13120 is in a rapid transitional phase between a merger-driven starburst and an unobscured quasar. The case of SMM J13120 highlights how mergers may drive important physical changes in galaxies without pushing them off the main sequence.

Funder

Jaqueline Hodge

Publisher

American Astronomical Society

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics

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