Molecular Gas in Spiral Galaxies: A New Warm Phase at Large Galactocentric Distances?

  • Papadopoulos P
  • Thi W
  • Viti S
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Abstract

There is now strong evidence suggesting that the 12CO J = 1-0 transition, widely used to trace H2 gas, significantly underestimates its mass in metal-poor regions. In spiral disks such regions are found in large galactocentric distances where we show that any unaccounted H2 gas phase is likely to be diffuse (~5-20 cm^-3) and warmer (T(kin) ~ 50-100 K) than the cool (T(kin) ~ 15-20 K) CO-luminous one. Moreover we find that a high value of the H2 formation rate on grains, suggested by recent observational work, can compensate for the reduction of the available grain surface in the metal-poor part of typical galactic disks and thus enhance this CO-poor H2 component which may be contributing significantly to the mass and pressure of spiral disks beyond their optical radius.

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Papadopoulos, P. P., Thi, W. ‐F., & Viti, S. (2002). Molecular Gas in Spiral Galaxies: A New Warm Phase at Large Galactocentric Distances? The Astrophysical Journal, 579(1), 270–274. https://doi.org/10.1086/342872

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