A Survey of Atomic Carbon [C I] in High-redshift Main-sequence Galaxies
Dickinson, Mark E.; Lee, Min-Young; Daddi, Emanuele; Cormier, Diane; Madden, Suzanne C.; Juneau, Stéphanie; Liu, Daizhong; Gao, Yu; Magdis, Georgios E.; Aravena, Manuel; Jin, Shuowen; Kartaltepe, Jeyhan; Valentino, Francesco; Sanders, David; Bournaud, Frédéric; Silverman, John; Puglisi, Annagrazia; Cibinel, Anna
Denmark, Greece, France, Germany, Chile, United Kingdom, United States, China, Japan
Abstract
We present the first results of an Atacama Large Millimeter Array survey of the lower fine-structure line of atomic carbon [C I] {(}3{P}1 {--}{}3{P}0) in far-infrared-selected galaxies on the main sequence at z ∼ 1.2 in the COSMOS field. We compare our sample with a comprehensive compilation of data available in the literature for local and high-redshift starbursting systems and quasars. We show that the [C I] (3 P 1 → 3 P 0) luminosity correlates on global scales with the infrared luminosity {L}IR}, similar to low-J CO transitions. We report a systematic variation of {L}{[{{C}{{I}}]}3{P}1 {--}{}3{P}0}{\prime }/{L}IR} as a function of the galaxy type, with the ratio being larger for main-sequence galaxies than for starbursts and submillimeter galaxies at fixed {L}IR}. The {L}{[{{C}{{I}}]}3{P}1 {--}{}3{P}0}{\prime }/{L}CO(2-1)}{\prime } and {M}[{{C}{{I}}]}/{M}dust} mass ratios are similar for main-sequence galaxies and for local and high-redshift starbursts within a 0.2 dex intrinsic scatter, suggesting that [C I] is a good tracer of molecular gas mass as CO and dust. We derive a fraction of {f}[{{C}{{I}}]}={M}[{{C}{{I}}]}/{M}{{C}}∼ 3 % {--}13 % of the total carbon mass in the atomic neutral phase. Moreover, we estimate the neutral atomic carbon abundance, the fundamental ingredient to calibrate [C I] as a gas tracer, by comparing {L}{[{{C}{{I}}]}3{P}1 {--}{}3{P}0}{\prime } and available gas masses from CO lines and dust emission. We find lower [C I] abundances in main-sequence galaxies than in starbursting systems and submillimeter galaxies as a consequence of the canonical α CO and gas-to-dust conversion factors. This argues against the application to different galaxy populations of a universal standard [C I] abundance derived from highly biased samples.