학술논문

WISDOM Project -- XVII. Beam-by-beam Properties of the Molecular Gas in Early-type Galaxies
Document Type
Working Paper
Source
Subject
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies
Language
Abstract
We present a study of the molecular gas of seven early-type galaxies with high angular resolution data obtained as part of the mm-Wave Interferometric Survey of Dark Object Masses (WISDOM) project with the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array. Using a fixed spatial scale approach, we study the mass surface density ($\Sigma$) and velocity dispersion ($\sigma$) of the molecular gas on spatial scales ranging from $60$ to $120$pc. Given the spatial resolution of our data ($20$ - $70$pc), we characterise these properties across many thousands of individual sight lines ($\approx50,000$ at our highest physical resolution). The molecular gas along these sight lines has a large range ($\approx2$dex) of mass surface densities and velocity dispersions $\approx40\%$ higher than those of star-forming spiral galaxies. It has virial parameters $\alpha_\mathrm{vir}$ that depend weakly on the physical scale observed, likely due to beam smearing of the bulk galactic rotation, and is generally super-virial. Comparing the internal turbulent pressure ($P_\mathrm{turb}$) to the pressure required for dynamic equilibrium ($P_\mathrm{DE}$), the ratio $P_\mathrm{turb}$/$P_\mathrm{DE}$ is significantly less than unity in all galaxies, indicating that the gas is not in dynamic equilibrium and is strongly compressed, in apparent contradiction to the virial parameters. This may be due to our neglect of shear and tidal forces, and/or the combination of three-dimensional and vertical diagnostics. Both $\alpha_\mathrm{vir}$ and $P_\mathrm{turb}$ anti-correlate with the global star-formation rate of our galaxies. We therefore conclude that the molecular gas in early-type galaxies is likely unbound, and that large-scale dynamics likely plays a critical role in its regulation. This contrasts to the giant molecular clouds in the discs of late-type galaxies, that are much closer to dynamical equilibrium.
Comment: 32 pages (16 of Appendices), 39 Figures (27 in Appendices). Accepted for publication in MNRAS