The Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope Cold-HI AT z≈1 Survey

Abstract

We describe the design, data analysis, and basic results of the Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope Cold-HI AT z≈1 (GMRT-CATz1) survey, a 510-hour upgraded GMRT HI 21 cm emission survey of galaxies at z=0.74-1.45 in the DEEP2 survey fields. The GMRT-CATz1 survey is aimed at characterising HI in galaxies during and just after the epoch of peak star-formation activity in the Universe, a key epoch in galaxy evolution. We obtained high-quality HI 21 cm spectra for 11,419 blue star-forming galaxies at z=0.74-1.45, in seven pointings on the DEEP2 subfields. We detect the stacked HI 21 cm emission signal of the 11,419 star-forming galaxies, which have an average stellar mass of M* ≈ 1010 M, at 7.1σ statistical significance, obtaining an average HI mass of MHI=(13.71.9)×109 M. This is significantly higher than the average HI mass of MHI =(3.96 0.17)×109 M in star-forming galaxies at z ≈ 0 with an identical stellar-mass distribution. We stack the rest-frame 1.4 GHz continuum emission of our 11,419 galaxies to infer an average star-formation rate (SFR) of 8.070.82 M yr-1. Combining our average HI mass and average SFR estimates yields an HI depletion timescale of 1.700.29 Gyr, for star-forming galaxies at z≈1, ≈3 times lower than that of local galaxies. We thus find that, although main-sequence galaxies at z≈1 have a high HI mass, their short HI depletion timescale is likely to cause quenching of their star-formation activity in the absence of rapid gas accretion from the circumgalactic medium.

0

Turn this paper into a lesson

ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.

Discussion (0)

Sign in to join the discussion.

Loading comments…