2008 (IPP)
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Item First detection of CO in a high-redshift damped Lyman - Alpha system(2008-04) Srianand, R.We present the first detection of carbon monoxide (CO) in a damped Lyman-α system (DLA) at zabs =2.41837 toward SDSS J143912.04+111740.5. We also detected H2 and HD molecules. The measured total column densities (in log units) of H i, H2, and CO are 20.10±0.10, 19.38±0.10, and 13.89±0.02, respectively. The molecular fraction, f = 2N(H2)/(N(H i)+2N(H2)) = 0.27+0.10 −0.08, is the highest among all known DLAs. The abundances relative to solar of S, Zn, Si, and Fe are −0.03±0.12, +0.16±0.11, −0.86±0.11, and −1.32±0.11, respectively, indicating a high metal enrichment and a depletion pattern onto dust-grains similar to the cold ISM of our Galaxy. The measured N(CO)/N(H2) = 3×10−6 is much less than the conventional CO/H2 ratio used to convert the CO emission into gaseous mass but is consistent with what is measured along translucent sightlines in the Galaxy. The CO rotational excitation temperatures are higher than those measured in our Galactic ISM for similar kinetic temperature and density. Using the C i fine structure absorption lines, we show that this is a consequence of the excitation being dominated by radiative pumping by the cosmic microwave background radiation (CMBR). From the CO excitation temperatures, we derive TCMBR = 9.15±0.72 K, while 9.315±0.007 K is expected from the hot big-bang theory. This is the most precise high-redshift measurement of TCMBR and the first confirmation of the theory using molecular transitions at high redshift.Item HD molecules at high redshift: A low astration factor of deuterium in a solar-metallicity DLA system at z=2.418(2008-08) Noterdaeme, P.; Srianand, R.We present the detection of deuterated molecular hydrogen (HD) in the remote Universe in a damped Lyman-α cloud at zabs = 2.418 toward the quasar SDSS J143912.04+111740.5. This is a unique system in which H2 and CO molecules are also detected. The chemical enrichment of this gas derived from Zn ii and S ii is as high as in the Sun. We measure N(HD)/2N(H2) = 1.5+0.6 −0.4 × 10−5, which is significantly higher than the same ratio measured in the Galaxy and close to the primordial D/H ratio estimated from the WMAP constraint on the baryonic matter density (Ωb). This indicates a low astration factor of deuterium that contrasts with the unusually high chemical enrichment of the gas. This can be interpreted as the consequence of an intense infall of primordial gas onto the associated galaxy. Detection of HD molecules at high-z also opens the possibility to obtain an independent constraint on the cosmological-time variability of , the proton-to-electron mass ratio.