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Physical Properties of the Southwest Outflow Streamer in the Starburst Galaxy NGC 253 with ALCHEMI

Authors :
Bao, Min
Harada, Nanase
Kohno, Kotaro
Yoshimura, Yuki
Egusa, Fumi
Nishimura, Yuri
Tanaka, Kunihiko
Nakanishi, Kouichiro
Martín, Sergio
Mangum, Jeffrey G.
Sakamoto, Kazushi
Muller, Sébastien
Bouvier, Mathilde
Colzi, Laura
Emig, Kimberly L.
Meier, David S.
Henkel, Christian
Humire, Pedro
Huang, Ko-Yun
Rivilla, Víctor M.
van der Werf, Paul
Viti, Serena
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

The physical properties of galactic molecular outflows are important as they could constrain outflow formation mechanisms. We study the properties of the southwest (SW) outflow streamer including gas kinematics, optical depth, dense gas fraction, and shock strength in the central molecular zone of the starburst galaxy NGC 253. We image the molecular emission at a spatial resolution of $\sim$27 pc based on data from the ALCHEMI program. We trace the kinematics of molecular gas with CO(1-0) line. We constrain the optical depth of CO emission with CO/$^{13}$CO(1-0) ratio, the dense gas fraction with HCN/CO(1-0) ratio, as well as the shock strength with SiO(2-1)/$^{13}$CO(1-0) ratio. The CO/$^{13}$CO(1-0) integrated intensity ratio is $\sim$21 in the SW streamer region, which approximates the C/$^{13}$C isotopic abundance ratio. The higher integrated intensity ratio compared to the disk can be attributed to the optically thinner environment for CO(1-0) emission inside the SW streamer. The HCN/CO(1-0) and SiO(2-1)/$^{13}$CO(1-0) integrated intensity ratios both approach $\sim$0.2 in three giant molecular clouds (GMCs) at the base of the outflow streamers, which implies the higher dense gas fraction and enhanced strength of fast shocks in those GMCs than in the disk. The contours of those two integrated intensity ratios are extended towards the directions of outflow streamers, which connects the enhanced dense gas fraction and shock strength with molecular outflow. Moreover, the molecular gas with enhanced dense gas fraction and shock strength located at the base of the SW streamer shares the same velocity with the outflow. These phenomena suggest that the star formation inside the GMCs can trigger the shocks and further drive the molecular outflow.<br />Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A, 14 pages, 11 figures

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2404.04791
Document Type :
Working Paper