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We use deep far-infrared data from the PEP/GOODS-Herschel surveys and rest frame ultraviolet photometry to study the evolution of the molecular gas mass function of normal star forming galaxies. Computing the molecular gas mass, M(mol), by scaling star formation rates (SFR) through depletion timescales, or combining IR luminosity and obscuration properties as in Nordon et al., we obtain M(mol) for roughly 700, z=0.2-3.0 galaxies near the star forming main sequence. The number density of galaxies follows a Schechter function of M(mol). The characteristic mass M* is found to strongly evolve up to z~1, and then to flatten at earlier epochs, resembling the infrared luminosity evolution of similar objects. At z~1, our result is supported by an estimate based on the stellar mass function of star forming galaxies and gas fraction scalings from the PHIBSS survey. We compare our measurements to results from current models, finding better agreement with those that are treating star formation laws directly rather than in post-processing. Integrating the mass function, we study the evolution of the M(mol) density and its density parameter Omega(mol).
We present PHIBSS, the IRAM Plateau de Bure high-z blue sequence CO 3-2 survey of the molecular gas properties in normal star forming galaxies (SFGs) near the cosmic star formation peak. PHIBSS provides 52 CO detections in two redshift slices at z~1.
[abridged] We present interferometric CO observations of twelve z~2 submillimetre-faint, star-forming radio galaxies (SFRGs) which are thought to be ultraluminous infrared galaxies (ULIRGs) possibly dominated by warmer dust (T_dust ~> 40 K) than subm
We study the molecular gas content of 24 star-forming galaxies at $z=3-4$, with a median stellar mass of $10^{9.1}$ M$_{odot}$, from the MUSE Hubble Ultra Deep Field (HUDF) Survey. Selected by their Lyman-alpha-emission and H-band magnitude, the gala
Stars form from cold molecular interstellar gas. Since this is relatively rare in the local Universe, galaxies like the Milky Way form only a few new stars per year. Typical massive galaxies in the distant Universe formed stars an order of magnitude
We follow the structural evolution of star forming galaxies (SFGs) like the Milky Way by selecting progenitors to z~1.3 based on the stellar mass growth inferred from the evolution of the star forming sequence. We select our sample from the 3D-HST su