NOEMA3D: Resolving radial gas flows in disk galaxies at z~1.1-1.6 with high-resolution CO observations
Jean-Baptiste Jolly, Linda J. Tacconi, Reinhard Genzel, Roberto Neri, Karl Schuster + 32 more
TLDR
High-resolution CO observations reveal significant radial gas flows driven by spiral arms and bars in z~1.1-1.6 disk galaxies.
Key contributions
- First high-resolution study of molecular gas kinematics and radial flows in z~1.1-1.6 disk galaxies using NOEMA CO observations.
- Discovered significant non-circular gas motions (50-100 km/s) linked to spiral arms and bars, indicating efficient gas transport.
- Quantified substantial molecular gas inflow rates (~50 M☉/yr), comparable to star formation rates, driven by these features.
- Demonstrated that spiral arms primarily drive inflows, while bars induce complex inflow-outflow patterns.
Why it matters
This study provides crucial insights into gas transport in galaxies at the peak of cosmic star formation. It reveals how spiral arms and bars efficiently funnel cold gas to galaxy centers, fueling bulge growth and central activity. This understanding is vital for galaxy evolution models at cosmic noon.
Original Abstract
We present NOEMA3D, a unique high-resolution study of purely molecular gas kinematics at $z \sim 1.1$ to 1.6, providing a dedicated view of cold gas dynamics at the late stages of the peak epoch of cosmic star formation. Using deep ($gtrsim 20$ hr on source per target) IRAM-NOEMA CO observations of 10 massive ($10.45 < log(M^*/M_\odot) < 11.43$) ) main-sequence galaxies, complemented by high-resolution JWST imaging, we resolve the molecular gas kinematics and morphology on kiloparsec scales. We find that all galaxies exhibit ordered rotation with moderate intrinsic turbulence (median $σ_0 \sim 32 \pm 10$ km/s, median $V_c/σ_0 \sim 8.6 \pm 2.9$), consistent with dynamically turbulent disks at late cosmic noon. After modeling the axisymmetric rotation with the forward-modeling code DysmalPy, we reveal spatially coherent velocity residuals in all but one more inclined system. The inferred in-plane non circular motions reach amplitudes of $\sim 50$-100 km/s, significantly larger than typically observed in local disk galaxies. Interpreting these non-circular motions as radial flows we find that the velocity residuals spatially coincide with non-axisymmetric structures -- spiral arms and bars -- demonstrating a direct link between galaxy morphology and gas transport at $z \sim 1$-2. In spiral galaxies, the residual velocity patterns are typically dominated by inflows, while barred systems display an apparent inflow-outflow pattern, characteristic of in-plane bar-driven gas motions. We further find that the inferred molecular gas inflow rates are substantial, with a typical net inflow rate of the order of the star formation rate ( $\dot M \sim -50 M_\odot/$yr). This implies that spiral arms and bars at cosmic noon are highly efficient at funneling cold gas toward galaxy centers, perhaps driving the buildup of bulges and feeding central star forming regions and supermassive black holes.
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