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CO Emission, Molecular Gas, and Metallicity in Main-Sequence Star-Forming Galaxies at $z\sim2.3$

Authors :
Ryan L. Sanders
Alice E. Shapley
Tucker Jones
Irene Shivaei
Gergö Popping
Naveen A. Reddy
Romeel Davé
Sedona H. Price
Bahram Mobasher
Mariska Kriek
Alison L. Coil
Brian Siana
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

We present observations of CO(3-2) in 13 main-sequence $z=2.0-2.5$ star-forming galaxies at $\log(M_*/M_{\odot})=10.2-10.6$ that span a wide range in metallicity (O/H) based on rest-optical spectroscopy. We find that CO(3-2)/SFR decreases with decreasing metallicity, implying that the CO luminosity per unit gas mass is lower in low-metallicity galaxies at $z\sim2$. We constrain the CO-to-H$_2$ conversion factor ($\alpha_{\text{CO}}$) and find that $\alpha_{\text{CO}}$ inversely correlates with metallicity at $z\sim2$. We derive molecular gas masses ($M_{\text{mol}}$) and characterize the relations among $M_*$, SFR, $M_{\text{mol}}$, and metallicity. At $z\sim2$, $M_{\text{mol}}$ increases and molecular gas fraction ($M_{\text{mol}}$/$M_*$) decrease with increasing $M_*$, with a significant secondary dependence on SFR. Galaxies at $z\sim2$ lie on a near-linear molecular KS law that is well-described by a constant depletion time of 700 Myr. We find that the scatter about the mean SFR-$M_*$, O/H-$M_*$, and $M_{\text{mol}}$-$M_*$ relations is correlated such that, at fixed $M_*$, $z\sim2$ galaxies with larger $M_{\text{mol}}$ have higher SFR and lower O/H. We thus confirm the existence of a fundamental metallicity relation at $z\sim2$ where O/H is inversely correlated with both SFR and $M_{\text{mol}}$ at fixed $M_*$. These results suggest that the scatter of the $z\sim2$ star-forming main sequence, mass-metallicity relation, and $M_{\text{mol}}$-$M_*$ relation are primarily driven by stochastic variations in gas inflow rates. We place constraints on the mass loading of galactic outflows and perform a metal budget analysis, finding that massive $z\sim2$ star-forming galaxies retain only 30% of metals produced, implying that a large mass of metals resides in the circumgalactic medium.<br />Comment: 35 pages, 17 figures, submitted to ApJ

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....87bc058fd8b155215c0e8466f6dfc2bd