On the evolution of the molecular gas fraction of star forming galaxies
Abstract
We present IRAM Plateau de Bure interferometric detections of CO(1-0) emission from a 24um-selected sample of star-forming galaxies at z=0.4. The galaxies have PAH 7.7um-derived star formation rates of SFR~30-60 MSun/yr and stellar masses M*~1011 MSun. The CO(1-0) luminosities of the galaxies imply that the disks still contain a large reservoir of molecular gas, contributing ~20% of the baryonic mass, but have star-formation 'efficiencies' similar to local quiescent disks and gas-dominated disks at z~1.5-2. We reveal evidence that the average molecular gas fraction has undergone strong evolution since z~2, with fgas ~ (1+z)2 +/- 0.5. The evolution of fgas encodes fundamental information about the relative depletion/replenishment of molecular fuel in galaxies, and is expected to be a strong function of halo mass. We show that the latest predictions for the evolution of the molecular gas fraction in semi-analytic models of galaxy formation within a LCDM Universe are supported by these new observations.