Let’s be honest: the universe has an awful lot of gas. But the gas discovered in a new study isn’t your run-of-the-mill atomic gas! We’ve now found dense, star-formation-enabling molecular gas farther out than ever before.

A Crucial Ingredient

Interstellar gas fills galaxies, lingering in the space between stars. Most of this material is in atomic form — primarily low-density ionized hydrogen and helium. But in some regions, conditions are right for atoms to join together into molecules, forming reservoirs of molecular gas. Less than 1% of the Milky Way’s interstellar medium is molecular gas by volume — yet this gas is critical to the galaxy’s development.

You can’t get star formation without molecular gas; this cold, dense material forms the fuel that can eventually collapse into hydrogen-fusing cores. This means that hunting molecular gas can give us insight into how galaxies build up and form their stellar populations: molecular gas reservoirs actively feed violently starbursting galaxies throughout the universe.

Molecular gas is also often associated with the host galaxies of distant quasars, supermassive black holes accreting vast amounts of matter and shining brightly. By studying the properties of this molecular gas, we can learn more about how supermassive black holes evolve with their host galaxies.

Looking Back in Time

Because galaxy formation and evolution is very much a big-picture question, we might wonder how molecular gas was different in the early universe. Did early star-forming galaxies contain more molecular gas than today’s galaxies? What were the properties of the gas? How did early galaxies form and evolve, creating young stars and feeding their central black holes?

To answer these questions, we need to hunt for large reservoirs of molecular gas at high redshifts. But this is challenging! The most common component of molecular gas, molecular hydrogen, isn’t easily detectable. For this reason, we turn to carbon monoxide (CO) as a tracer of molecular gas reservoirs.

So far, the most distant detections we’ve made of molecular gas using CO emission are at redshifts of z = 6–6.9. But now a pair of scientists from National Central University in Taiwan have looked even farther.

Drama of a Distant Interaction

Using observations of CO emission lines, Ekaterina Koptelova and Chorng-Yuan Hwang have discovered two sources containing molecular gas at a redshift of z = 7.09. That’s 13 billion light-years away, or from a time when the universe was just ~700,000 years old!

Koptelova and Hwang estimate the two molecular-gas sources to be roughly 27,000 and 41,000 light-years across. One of the two sources is coincident with a previously discovered quasar, and the other is located about 68,000 light-years to the side of the quasar — a very close neighbor, on cosmic scales!

The properties of the sources lead the authors to suggest that the gas may be tracing two or more star-forming galaxies that are interacting in the early universe. These colliding monsters contain reservoirs of molecular gas to fuel their star formation, as well as at least one quasar.

Future observations will hopefully confirm this picture and help us to better understand the role that molecular gas plays in the dramatic formation and evolution of galaxies in the early universe.

Citation

“A Luminous Molecular Gas Pair beyond Redshift 7,” Ekaterina Koptelova and Chorng-Yuan Hwang 2019 ApJL 880 L19. doi:10.3847/2041-8213/ab2ed9