Artículo
Alma spectroscopic survey in the hubble ultra deep field: co luminosity functions and the evolution of the cosmic density of molecular gas
Fecha
2016-12Registro en:
Astrophysical Journal. Open Access. Volume 833, Issue 1. 10 December 2016. Article number 69
0004-637X
10.3847/1538-4357/833/1/69
Autor
Decarli, Roberto
Walter, Fabian
Aravena, Manuel
Carilli, Chris
Bouwens, Rychard
Da Cunha, Elisabete
Daddi, Emanuele
Ivison, R.J.
Popping, Gergö
Riechers, Dominik
Smail, Ian R.
Swinbank, Mark
Weiss, Axel
Anguita, Timo
Assef, Roberto J.
Bauer, Franz E.
Bell, Eric F.
Bertoldi, Frank
Chapman, Scott
Colina, Luis
Cortes, Paulo C.
Cox, Pierre
Dickinson, Mark
Elbaz, David
Gónzalez-López, Jorge
Ibar, Edo
Infante, Leopoldo
Hodge, Jacqueline
Karim, Alex
Fevre, Olivier Le
Magnelli, Benjamin
Neri, Roberto
Oesch, Pascal
Ota, Kazuaki
Rix, Hans-Walter
Sargent, Mark
Sheth, Kartik
Van Der Wel, Arjen
Van Der Werf, Paul
Wagg, Jeff
Institución
Resumen
In this paper we use ASPECS, the ALMA Spectroscopic Survey in the Hubble Ultra Deep Field in band 3 and
band 6, to place blind constraints on the CO luminosity function and the evolution of the cosmic molecular gas
density as a function of redshift up to z ∼ 4.5. This study is based on galaxies that have been selected solely
through their CO emission and not through any other property. In all of the redshift bins the ASPECS
measurements reach the predicted “knee” of the CO luminosity function (around 5 × 109 K km s−1 pc2
). We find
clear evidence of an evolution in the CO luminosity function with respect to z ∼ 0, with more CO-luminous
galaxies present at z ∼ 2. The observed galaxies at z ∼ 2 also appear more gas-rich than predicted by recent semi analytical models. The comoving cosmic molecular gas density within galaxies as a function of redshift shows a
drop by a factor of 3–10 from z ∼ 2 to z ∼ 0 (with significant error bars), and possibly a decline at z > 3. This
trend is similar to the observed evolution of the cosmic star formation rate density. The latter therefore appears to
be at least partly driven by the increased availability of molecular gas reservoirs at the peak of cosmic star
formation (z ∼ 2).