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It has recently been shown that the abundance of cold neutral gas may follow a similar evolution as the star formation history. This is physically motivated, since stars form out of this component of the neutral gas and if the case, would resolve the longstanding issue that there is a clear disparity between the total abundance of neutral gas and star forming activity over the history of the Universe. Radio-band 21-cm absorption traces the cold gas and comparison with the Lyman-alpha absorption, which traces all of the gas, provides a measure of the cold gas fraction or the spin temperature. The recent study has shown that the spin temperature (degenerate with the ratio of the absorber/emitter extent) appears to be anti-correlated with the star formation density, undergoing a similar steep evolution as the star formation rate over redshifts of 0 < z < 3, whereas the total neutral hydrogen exhibits little evolution. Above z > 3, where the SFR shows a steep decline with redshift, there is insufficient 21-cm data to determine whether the spin temperature continues to follow the SFR. Knowing this is paramount in ascertaining whether the cold neutral gas does trace the star formation over the Universes history. We explore the feasibility of resolving this with 21-cm observations of the largest contemporary sample of reliable damped Lyman-alpha absorption systems and conclude that, while todays largest radio interferometers can reach the required sensitivity at z < 3.5, the Square Kilometre Array is required to probe to higher redshifts.
There is a well known disparity between the evolution the star formation rate density, {psi}*, and the abundance of neutral hydrogen (HI), the raw material for star formation. Recently, however, we have shown that {psi}* may be correlated with the fr
The bulk of the stellar growth over cosmic time is dominated by IR luminous galaxies at cosmic noon (z=1-2), many of which harbor a hidden active galactic nucleus (AGN). We use state of the art infrared color diagnostics, combining Spitzer and Hersch
We combine constraints on galaxy formation histories with planet formation models, yielding the Earth-like and giant planet formation histories of the Milky Way and the Universe as a whole. In the Hubble Volume (10^13 Mpc^3), we expect there to be ~1
We use the CARMA millimeter interferometer to map the Antennae Galaxies (NGC4038/39), tracing the bulk of the molecular gas via the 12CO(1-0) line and denser molecular gas via the high density transitions HCN(1-0), HCO+(1-0), CS(2-1), and HNC(1-0). W
Theory predicts that cosmological gas accretion plays a fundamental role fuelling star formation in galaxies. However, a detailed description of the accretion process to be used when interpreting observations is still lacking. Using the state-of-the-