CO emission in distant galaxies on and above the main sequence. Valentino, F., Daddi, E., Puglisi, A., Magdis, G. E., Liu, D., Kokorev, V., Cortzen, I., Madden, S. C., Aravena, M., Gomez-Guijarro, C., Lee, M., Le Floc'h, E., Gao, Y., Gobat, R., Bournaud, F., Dannerbauer, H., Jin, S., Dickinson, M. E., Kartaltepe, J. S., & Sanders, D. arXiv e-prints, 2006:arXiv:2006.12521, June, 2020.
CO emission in distant galaxies on and above the main sequence [link]Paper  abstract   bibtex   
We present the detection of multiple CO line transitions with ALMA in a few tens of infrared-selected galaxies on and above the main sequence at z=1.1-1.7. We reliably detected the emission of CO(5-4), CO(2-1), and CO(7-6)+[CI](2-1) in 50, 33, and 13 galaxies, respectively, and we complemented this information with available CO(4-3) and [CI](1-0) fluxes for part of the sample, and modeling of the optical-to-mm SEDs. We retrieve a quasi-linear relation between LIR and CO(5-4) or CO(7-6) for main-sequence galaxies and starbursts, corroborating the hypothesis that these transitions can be used as SFR tracers. We find the CO excitation to steadily increase as a function of the star formation efficiency, the mean intensity of the radiation field warming the dust, the surface density of SFR, and, less distinctly, with the distance from the main sequence. This adds to the tentative evidence for higher excitation of the CO+[CI] SLED of starbursts relative to that for main-sequence objects, where the dust opacities play a minor role in shaping the high-J CO transitions in our sample. However, the distinction between the average SLED of upper main-sequence and starburst galaxies is blurred, driven by a wide variety of intrinsic shapes. LVG radiative transfer modeling demonstrates the existence of a highly excited component that elevates the CO SLED of high-redshift main-sequence and starbursting galaxies above the typical values observed in the disk of the Milky Way. This excited component is dense and it encloses \textasciitilde50% of the total molecular gas mass in main-sequence objects. We interpret the observed trends involving the CO excitation as mainly driven by a combination of large SFRs and compact sizes, naturally connected with enhanced dense molecular gas fractions and higher dust and gas temperatures, due to increasing UV radiation fields, cosmic ray rates, and dust/gas coupling. [Abridged]
@article{valentino_co_2020,
	title = {{CO} emission in distant galaxies on and above the main sequence},
	volume = {2006},
	url = {http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2020arXiv200612521V},
	abstract = {We present the detection of multiple CO line transitions with ALMA in a few tens of infrared-selected galaxies on and above the main sequence at z=1.1-1.7. We reliably detected the emission of CO(5-4), CO(2-1), and CO(7-6)+[CI](2-1) in 50, 33, and 13 galaxies, respectively, and we complemented this information with available CO(4-3) and [CI](1-0) fluxes for part of the sample, and modeling of the optical-to-mm SEDs. We retrieve a quasi-linear relation between LIR and CO(5-4) or CO(7-6) for main-sequence galaxies and starbursts, corroborating the hypothesis that these transitions can be used as SFR tracers. We find the CO excitation to steadily increase as a function of the star formation efficiency, the mean intensity of the radiation field warming the dust, the surface density of SFR, and, less distinctly, with the distance from the main sequence. This adds to the tentative evidence for higher excitation of the CO+[CI] SLED of starbursts relative to that for main-sequence objects, where the dust opacities play a minor role in shaping the high-J CO transitions in our sample. However, the
distinction between the average SLED of upper main-sequence and
starburst galaxies is blurred, driven by a wide variety of intrinsic shapes. LVG radiative transfer modeling demonstrates the existence of a highly excited component that elevates the CO SLED of high-redshift main-sequence and starbursting galaxies above the typical values observed in the disk of the Milky Way. This excited component is dense and it encloses {\textasciitilde}50\% of the total molecular gas mass in main-sequence objects. We interpret the observed trends involving the CO excitation as mainly driven by a combination of large SFRs and compact sizes,
naturally connected with enhanced dense molecular gas fractions and higher dust and gas temperatures, due to increasing UV radiation fields, cosmic ray rates, and dust/gas coupling. [Abridged]},
	urldate = {2020-06-29},
	journal = {arXiv e-prints},
	author = {Valentino, Francesco and Daddi, Emanuele and Puglisi, Annagrazia and Magdis, Georgios E. and Liu, Daizhong and Kokorev, Vasily and Cortzen, Isabella and Madden, Suzanne C. and Aravena, Manuel and Gomez-Guijarro, Carlos and Lee, Min-Young and Le Floc'h, Emeric and Gao, Yu and Gobat, Raphael and Bournaud, Frederic and Dannerbauer, Helmut and Jin, Shuowen and Dickinson, Mark E. and Kartaltepe, Jeyhan S. and Sanders, David},
	month = jun,
	year = {2020},
	keywords = {Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies},
	pages = {arXiv:2006.12521},
}

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