The ALMA Spectroscopic Survey in the Hubble Ultra Deep Field: CO Excitation and Atomic Carbon in Star-forming Galaxies at z = 1-3
Carilli, Chris; Inami, Hanae; Boogaard, Leindert A.; Smail, Ian; Daddi, Emanuele; van der Werf, Paul; Walter, Fabian; Kaasinen, Melanie; Bouwens, Rychard; Aravena, Manuel; Díaz-Santos, Tanio; Decarli, Roberto; Cox, Pierre; Weiss, Axel; Riechers, Dominik; Wagg, Jeff; Popping, Gergö; González-López, Jorge; Cortes, Paulo C.
Netherlands, Germany, Italy, United States, Chile, United Kingdom, France, China, Greece, Japan
Abstract
We investigate the CO excitation and interstellar medium (ISM) conditions in a cold gas mass-selected sample of 22 star-forming galaxies at z = 0.46-3.60, observed as part of the ALMA Spectroscopic Survey in the Hubble Ultra Deep Field (ASPECS). Combined with Very Large Array follow-up observations, we detect a total of 34 CO $J\to J-1$ transitions with J = 1 up to 8 (and an additional 21 upper limits, up to J = 10) and 6 $[{\rm{C}}\,{\rm\small{I}}]$ ${}^{3}{P}_{1}{\to }^{3}\,{P}_{0}$ and ${}^{3}{P}_{2}{\to }^{3}\,{P}_{1}$ transitions (and 12 upper limits). The CO(2-1) and CO(3-2)-selected galaxies, at $\langle z\rangle =1.2$ and 2.5, respectively, exhibit a range in excitation in their mid-J = 4, 5 and high-J = 7, 8 lines, on average lower than ( ${L}_{\mathrm{IR}}$ -brighter) BzK-color- and submillimeter-selected galaxies at similar redshifts. The former implies that a warm ISM component is not necessarily prevalent in gas mass-selected galaxies at $\langle z\rangle =1.2$ . We use stacking and Large Velocity Gradient models to measure and predict the average CO ladders at z < 2 and z ≥ 2, finding ${r}_{21}=0.75\pm 0.11$ and ${r}_{31}=0.77\pm 0.14$ , respectively. From the models, we infer that the galaxies at z ≥ 2 have intrinsically higher excitation than those at z < 2. This fits a picture in which the global excitation is driven by an increase in the star formation rate surface density of galaxies with redshift. We derive a neutral atomic carbon abundance of $(1.9\pm 0.4)\times {10}^{-5}$ , comparable to the Milky Way and main-sequence galaxies at similar redshifts, and fairly high densities (≥104 cm-3), consistent with the low-J CO excitation. Our results imply a decrease in the cosmic molecular gas mass density at z ≥ 2 compared to previous ASPECS measurements.