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The CO Luminosity Density at High-z (COLDz) Survey: A Sensitive, Large-area Blind Search for Low-J CO Emission from Cold Gas in the Early Universe with the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array

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Pavesi, Riccardo
Sharon, C.
Riechers, Dominik
Hodge, Jacqueline
Decarli, Roberto
Walter, Fabian
Carilli, C L
Daddi, E
Smail, Ian
Dickinson, Mark

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IOP Publishing

Abstract

We describe the CO Luminosity Density at High-z (COLDz) survey, the first spectral line deep field targeting CO(1-0) emission from galaxies at z = 1.95-2.85 and CO(2-1) at z = 4.91-6.70. The main goal of COLDz is to constrain the cosmic density of molecular gas at the peak epoch of cosmic star formation. By targeting both a wide (similar to 51 arcmin(2)) and a deep (similar to 9 arcmin(2)) area, the survey is designed to robustly constrain the bright end and the characteristic luminosity of the CO(1-0) luminosity function. An extensive analysis of the reliability of our line candidates and new techniques provide detailed completeness and statistical corrections as necessary to determine the best constraints to date on the CO luminosity function. Our blind search for CO(1-0) uniformly selects starbursts and massive main-sequence galaxies based on their cold molecular gas masses. Our search also detects CO(2-1) line emission from optically dark, dusty star-forming galaxies at z > 5. We find a range of spatial sizes for the CO-traced gas reservoirs up to similar to 40 kpc, suggesting that spatially extended cold molecular gas reservoirs may be common in massive, gas-rich galaxies at z similar to 2. Through CO line stacking, we constrain the gas mass fraction in previously known typical star-forming galaxies at z = 2-3. The stacked CO detection suggests lower molecular gas mass fractions than expected for massive main-sequence galaxies by a factor of similar to 3-6. We find total CO line brightness at similar to 34 GHz of 0.45 +/- 0.2 mu K, which constrains future line intensity mapping and CMB experiments.

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The Astrophysical Journal

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Restricted until

2037-12-31