Kebron Gurara | National University of Singapore (original) (raw)

Kebron Gurara

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Papers by Kebron Gurara

Research paper thumbnail of More than star formation: High-J CO SLEDs of high-z galaxies

Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union, 2019

Theoretical work suggests that AGNs play an important role in quenching star formation in massive... more Theoretical work suggests that AGNs play an important role in quenching star formation in massive galaxies. In addition to molecular outflows observed in the local universe, emission from very high-J CO rotational transitions have been a key piece of evidence for AGN directly affecting the molecular gas reservoirs that fuel star formation. However, very few observations exist of CO rotational lines past the peak of the CO spectral line energy distribution (SLED) for galaxies in the early universe. Here we present new ALMA observations of high-J CO rotational lines (from CO(5–4) to CO(16–15)) in six z > 2 IR-bright systems, including several sources not known to contain a strong AGN for comparison. We detect significant amounts of high-excitation CO emission that suggests the presence of energy sources beyond UV-heating.

Research paper thumbnail of More than star formation: High-J CO SLEDs of high-z galaxies

Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union, 2019

Theoretical work suggests that AGNs play an important role in quenching star formation in massive... more Theoretical work suggests that AGNs play an important role in quenching star formation in massive galaxies. In addition to molecular outflows observed in the local universe, emission from very high-J CO rotational transitions have been a key piece of evidence for AGN directly affecting the molecular gas reservoirs that fuel star formation. However, very few observations exist of CO rotational lines past the peak of the CO spectral line energy distribution (SLED) for galaxies in the early universe. Here we present new ALMA observations of high-J CO rotational lines (from CO(5–4) to CO(16–15)) in six z > 2 IR-bright systems, including several sources not known to contain a strong AGN for comparison. We detect significant amounts of high-excitation CO emission that suggests the presence of energy sources beyond UV-heating.

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