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We present new results on the frequency distribution of projected HI column densities f(N,X), total comoving covering fraction, and integrated mass densities rho_HI of high redshift, HI `disks from a survey of damped Lya systems (DLAs) in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, Data Release 5. For the full sample spanning z=2.2 to 5 [738 DLAs], f(N,X) is well fitted by a double power-law with a break column density N_d = 10^(21.55 +/- 0.04) and low/high-end exponents alpha = -2.00 +/- 0.05, -6.4^{+1.1}_{-1.6}. The shape of f(N,X) is invariant during this redshift interval and also follows the projected surface density distribution of present-day HI disks as inferred from 21cm observations. We conclude that HI gas has been distributed in a self-similar fashion for the past 12Gyr. The normalization of f(N,X), in contrast, decreases by a factor of two during the ~2Gyr interval from z=4 to 2.2 giving corresponding decreases in both the total covering fraction and rho_HI. At z~2, these quantities match the present-day values suggesting no evolution during the past ~10Gyr. We argue that the evolution at early times is driven by `violent processes that removes gas from nearly half the galaxies at z~3 establishing the antecedants of current early-type galaxies. The perceived constancy of rho_HI, meanwhile, implies that HI gas is a necessary but insufficient pre-condition for star formation and that the global star-formation rate is driven by the accretion and condensation of fresh gas from the intergalactic medium.
Once understood as the paradigm of passively evolving objects, the discovery that massive galaxies experienced an enormous structural evolution in the last ten billion years has opened an active line of research. The most significant pending question
We combine the recent determination of the evolution of the cosmic density of molecular gas (H_2) using deep, volumetric surveys, with previous estimates of the cosmic density of stellar mass, star formation rate and atomic gas (HI), to constrain the
We investigate the abundance of Super-Massive Black Hole (SMBH) seeds in primordial galaxy halos. We explore the assumption that dark matter halos outgrowing a critical halo mass M_c have some probability p of having spawned a SMBH seed. Current obse
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We present predictions for the evolution of radio emission from Active Galactic Nuclei (AGNs). We use a model that follows the evolution of Supermassive Black Hole (SMBH) masses and spins, within the latest version of the GALFORM semi-analytic model