Evolutionary phases of gas-rich galaxies in a galaxy cluster at z=1.46
Abstract
We report a survey of molecular gas in galaxies in the XMMXCS J2215.9-1738 cluster at z=1.46. We have detected emission lines from 17 galaxies within a radius of R200 from the cluster center, in Band 3 data of the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) with a coverage of 93 -- 95 GHz in frequency and 2.33 arcmin2 in spatial direction. The lines are all identified as CO J=2--1 emission lines from cluster members at z1.46 by their redshifts and the colors of their optical and near-infrared (NIR) counterparts. The line luminosities reach down to L' CO(2-1)=4.5×109 K km s-1 pc2. The spatial distribution of galaxies with a detection of CO(2--1) suggests that they disappear from the very center of the cluster. The phase-space diagram showing relative velocity versus cluster-centric distance indicates that the gas-rich galaxies have entered the cluster more recently than the gas-poor star-forming galaxies and passive galaxies located in the virialized region of this cluster. The results imply that the galaxies have experienced ram-pressure stripping and/or strangulation during the course of infall towards the cluster center and then the molecular gas in the galaxies at the cluster center is depleted by star formation.
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