2010ApJ...715..775P


Query : 2010ApJ...715..775P

2010ApJ...715..775P - Astrophys. J., 715, 775-792 (2010/June-1)

CO spectral line energy distributions of infrared-luminous galaxies and active galactic nuclei.

PAPADOPOULOS P.P., VAN DER WERF P., ISAAK K. and XILOURIS E.M.

Abstract (from CDS):

We report on new sensitive CO J = 6-5 line observations of several luminous infrared galaxies (LIRGs; LIR(8-1000 µm) ≳ 1011 L), 36% (8/22) of them ultraluminous infrared galaxies (ULIRGs) (LIR>1012 L ), and two powerful local active galactic nuclei (AGNs)–the optically luminous QSO PG 1119+120 and the powerful radio galaxy 3C 293–using the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope on Mauna Kea in Hawaii. We combine these observations with existing low-J CO data and dust emission spectral energy distributions in the far-infrared-submillimeter from the literature to constrain the properties of the star-forming interstellar medium (ISM) in these systems. We then build the first local CO spectral line energy distributions (SLEDs) for the global molecular gas reservoirs that reach up to high J-levels. These CO SLEDs are neither biased by strong lensing (which affects many of those constructed for high-redshift galaxies), nor suffer from undersampling of CO-bright regions (as most current high-J CO observations of nearby extended systems do). We find: (1) a significant influence of dust optical depths on the high-J CO lines, suppressing the J = 6-5 line emission in some of the most IR-luminous LIRGs, (2) low global CO line excitation possible even in vigorously star-forming systems, (3) the first case of a shock-powered high-excitation CO SLED in the radio galaxy 3C 293 where a powerful jet-ISM interaction occurs, and (4) unusually highly excitated gas in the optically powerful QSO PG 1119+120. In Arp 220 and possibly other (U)LIRGs very faint CO J = 6-5 lines can be attributed to significant dust optical depths at short submillimeter wavelengths immersing those lines in a strong dust continuum, and also causing the C+ line luminosity deficit often observed in such extreme starbursts. Re-analysis of the CO line ratios available for submillimeter galaxies suggests that similar dust opacities also may be present in these high-redshift starbursts, with genuinely low excitation of large amounts of SF-quiescent gas being the only other possibility for their often low CO (high-J)/(low-J) line ratios. We then present a statistical method of separating these two almost degenerate possibilities, and show that high dust optical depths at submillimeter wavelengths can impede the diagnostic potential of submillimeter/IR lines (e.g., starbursts versus AGNs as gas excitation agents), which is of particular importance for the upcoming observations of the Herschel Space Observatory and the era of ALMA.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): galaxies: individual (Arp 220, PG 1119+120, 3C 293) - galaxies: starburst - ISM: molecules

CDS comments: IRAS 15237+2340 is a misprint for IRAS 15327+2340.

Simbad objects: 29

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Number of rows : 29
N Identifier Otype ICRS (J2000)
RA
ICRS (J2000)
DEC
Mag U Mag B Mag V Mag R Mag I Sp type #ref
1850 - 2024
#notes
1 NPM1G +40.0002 Sy2 00 08 20.3675391072 +40 37 55.922085984     16.8     ~ 45 0
2 M 77 Sy2 02 42 40.7091669408 -00 00 47.859690204 9.70 9.61 8.87 10.1 9.9 ~ 4608 2
3 2MASX J02513583+4315117 LIN 02 51 35.8187772168 +43 15 11.772126504   18.09 17.36     ~ 56 0
4 2MASX J04260482+1443360 LIN 04 26 04.829 +14 43 36.01           ~ 27 0
5 ZW VII 31 G 05 16 46.384 +79 40 12.63   15.8       ~ 151 0
6 LEDA 17155 Sy2 05 21 01.3994605776 -25 21 45.321827832   15.47 14.75     ~ 499 0
7 NAME Ori A MoC 05 38 -07.1           ~ 3015 0
8 NAME IRAS F08572+3915 NW LIN 09 00 25.364 +39 03 54.23     16.66     ~ 420 1
9 UGC 4881 IG 09 15 55.5 +44 19 58   14.9       ~ 169 0
10 NAME Arp 55 NE AGN 09 15 55.522 +44 19 58.08   14.87 14.42     ~ 53 0
11 UGC 5101 Sy2 09 35 51.6045544584 +61 21 11.589382368   15.20 15.50     ~ 573 4
12 M 82 AGN 09 55 52.430 +69 40 46.93 9.61 9.30 8.41     ~ 5865 6
13 NVSS J102000+081335 rG 10 20 00.1849825704 +08 13 33.648546108   17.5       ~ 158 1
14 LEDA 33083 LIN 10 59 18.128 +24 32 34.74   15.7       ~ 275 1
15 IC 2746 Sy2 11 21 47.1179115936 +11 44 18.909849876   15.38 14.93     ~ 219 0
16 LEDA 39024 LIN 12 13 46.107 +02 48 41.50           ~ 355 1
17 Mrk 231 Sy1 12 56 14.2341182928 +56 52 25.238373852   14.68 13.84     ~ 1989 3
18 IC 883 SBG 13 20 35.4 +34 08 22   14.8       ~ 401 1
19 Mrk 273 Sy2 13 44 42.1781 +55 53 12.819   15.68 14.91     ~ 914 3
20 3C 293.0 BLL 13 52 17.8719816576 +31 26 46.487381604   16.10 15.10     ~ 472 3
21 Z 49-57 GiC 15 13 13.0927 +07 13 31.850   15.5       ~ 238 1
22 IC 4553 SyG 15 34 57.22396 +23 30 11.6084   14.76 13.88     ~ 2961 4
23 3C 326 Rad 15 52 24.9 +20 05 57   17.87 17.08     ~ 219 3
24 [CSB2005] 6 G 16 45 02.42 +46 26 27.0           ~ 136 0
25 NGC 6240 Sy2 16 52 58.9 +02 24 03   14.31 13.37     ~ 1638 2
26 LEDA 60189 LIN 17 23 21.943 -00 17 00.96   15.1       ~ 425 0
27 NAME Galactic Center reg 17 45 39.60213 -29 00 22.0000           ~ 14436 0
28 NGC 7469 Sy1 23 03 15.6 +08 52 26 12.60 13.00 12.34     ~ 2098 3
29 LEDA 90429 SyG 23 39 01.274 +36 21 08.77   16.17       ~ 217 1

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