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CO (J=7->6) Observations of NGC 253: Cosmic Ray Heated Warm Molecular Gas

Authors :
Bradford, C. M.
Nikola, T.
Stacey, G. J.
Bolatto, A. D.
Jackson, J. M.
Savage, M. L.
Davidson, J. A.
Higdon, S. J.
Publication Year :
2002
Publisher :
arXiv, 2002.

Abstract

We report observations of the CO J=7->6 transition toward the starburst nucleus of NGC 253. This is the highest-excitation CO measurement in this source to date, and allows an estimate of the molecular gas excitation conditions. Comparison of the CO line intensities with a large velocity gradient, escape probability model indicates that the bulk of the 2-5 x 10^7 solar masses of molecular gas in the central 180 pc is highly excited. A model with T ~ 120 K, n_H_2 ~ 4.5 x 10^4 cm^-3 is consistent with the observed CO intensities as well as the rotational H2 lines observed with ISO. The inferred mass of warm, dense molecular gas is 10--30 times the atomic gas mass as traced through its [CII] and [OI] line emission. This large mass ratio is inconsistent with photodissociation region models where the gas is heated by far-UV starlight. It is also not likely that the gas is heated by shocks in outflows or cloud-cloud collisions. We conclude that the best mechanism for heating the gas is cosmic rays, which provide a natural means of uniformly heating the full volume of molecular clouds. With the tremendous supernova rate in the nucleus of NGC 253, the CR heating rate is at least ~800 times greater than in the Galaxy, more than sufficient to match the cooling observed in the CO lines.<br />12+ pages, 4 figures, to appear in The Astrophysical Journal (now includes tables)

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........6ec22a08fe359172e1783e268d2bc342
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.astro-ph/0212271