Do Spectroscopic Dense Gas Fractions Track Molecular Cloud Surface Densities?

Molly J. Gallagher, Adam K. Leroy, Frank Bigiel, Diane Cormier, María J. Jiménez-Donaire, Annie Hughes, Jérôme Pety, Eva Schinnerer, Jiayi Sun, Antonio Usero, Dyas Utomo, Alberto Bolatto, Mélanie Chevance, Chris Faesi, Simon C.O. Glover, Amanda A. Kepley, J. M.Diederik Kruijssen, Mark R. Krumholz, Sharon E. Meidt, David S. MeierEric Murphy, Miguel Querejeta, Erik Rosolowsky, Toshiki Saito, Andreas Schruba

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    33 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    We use Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array and Institute for Radio Astronomy in the Millimeter 30 m telescope data to investigate the relationship between the spectroscopically traced dense gas fraction and the cloud-scale (120 pc) molecular gas surface density in five nearby, star-forming galaxies. We estimate the dense gas mass fraction at 650 and 2800 pc scales using the ratio of HCN (1-0) to CO (1-0) emission. We then use high-resolution (120 pc) CO (2-1) maps to calculate the mass-weighted average molecular gas surface density within 650 or 2770 pc beam where the dense gas fraction is estimated. On average, the dense gas fraction correlates with the mass-weighted average molecular gas surface density. Thus, parts of a galaxy with higher mean cloud-scale gas surface density also appear to have a larger fraction of dense gas. The normalization and slope of the correlation do vary from galaxy to galaxy and with the size of the regions studied. This correlation is consistent with a scenario where the large-scale environment sets the gas volume density distribution, and this distribution manifests in both the cloud-scale surface density and the dense gas mass fraction.

    Original languageEnglish
    Article numberL38
    JournalAstrophysical Journal Letters
    Volume868
    Issue number2
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 1 Dec 2018

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