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LIGHTING THE DARK MOLECULAR GAS: H 2 AS A DIRECT TRACER
Robust knowledge of molecular gas mass is critical for understanding star formation in galaxies. The molecule does not emit efficiently in the cold interstellar medium, hence the molecular gas content of galaxies is typically inferred using indirect tracers. At low metallicity and in other extreme e...
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Published in: | The Astrophysical journal 2016-10, Vol.830 (1), p.18 |
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Main Authors: | , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Robust knowledge of molecular gas mass is critical for understanding star formation in galaxies. The
molecule does not emit efficiently in the cold interstellar medium, hence the molecular gas content of galaxies is typically inferred using indirect tracers. At low metallicity and in other extreme environments, these tracers can be subject to substantial biases. We present a new method of estimating total molecular gas mass in galaxies directly from pure mid-infrared rotational
emission. By assuming a power-law distribution of
rotational temperatures, we can accurately model
excitation and reliably obtain warm (
T
≳ 100 K)
gas masses by varying only the power law’s slope. With sensitivities typical of
Spitzer
/IRS, we are able to directly probe the
content via rotational emission down to ∼80 K, accounting for ∼15% of the total molecular gas mass in a galaxy. By extrapolating the fitted power-law temperature distributions to a calibrated
single
lower cutoff temperature, the model also recovers the total molecular content within a factor of ∼2.2 in a diverse sample of galaxies, and a subset of broken power-law models performs similarly well. In ULIRGs, the fraction of warm
gas rises with dust temperature, with some dependency on
α
CO
. In a sample of five low-metallicity galaxies ranging down to
, the model yields molecular masses up to ∼100× larger than implied by CO, in good agreement with other methods based on dust mass and star formation depletion timescale. This technique offers real promise for assessing molecular content in the early universe where CO and dust-based methods may fail. |
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ISSN: | 0004-637X 1538-4357 |
DOI: | 10.3847/0004-637X/830/1/18 |