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THE ENERGETICS OF MOLECULAR GAS IN NGC 891 FROM H-2 AND FAR-INFRARED SPECTROSCOPY

TitleTHE ENERGETICS OF MOLECULAR GAS IN NGC 891 FROM H-2 AND FAR-INFRARED SPECTROSCOPY
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2010
AuthorsStacey, GJ, Charmandaris, V, Boulanger, F, Wu, YL, Combes, F, Higdon, SJU, Smith, JDT, Nikola, T
JournalAstrophysical Journal
Volume721
Pagination59-73
Date PublishedSep
ISBN Number0004-637X
Accession NumberWOS:000282192900004
Abstract

We have studied the molecular hydrogen energetics of the edge-on spiral galaxy NGC 891, using a 34 position map in the lowest three pure rotational H-2 lines observed with the Spitzer Infrared Spectrograph. The S(0), S(1), and S(2) lines are bright with an extinction-corrected total luminosity of similar to 2.8 x 10(7) L-circle dot, or 0.09% of the total-infrared luminosity of NGC 891. The H-2 line ratios are nearly constant along the plane of the galaxy-we do not observe the previously reported strong drop-off in the S(1)/S(0) line intensity ratio in the outer regions of the galaxy, so we find no evidence for the very massive cold CO-free molecular clouds invoked to explain the past observations. The H-2 level excitation temperatures increase monotonically indicating that there is more than one component to the emitting gas. More than 99% of the mass is in the lowest excitation (T-ex similar to 125 K) "warm" component. In the inner galaxy, the warm H-2 emitting gas is similar to 16% of the CO(1-0)-traced cool molecular gas, while in the outer regions the fraction is twice as high. This large mass of warm gas is heated by a combination of the far-UV photons from stars in photodissociation regions (PDRs) and the dissipation of turbulent kinetic energy. Including the observed far-infrared [O I] and [C II] fine-structure line emission and far-infrared continuum emission in a self-consistent manner to constrain the PDR models, we find essentially all of the S(0) and most (70%) of the S(1) line arise from low excitation PDRs, while most (80%) of the S(2) and the remainder of the S(1) line emission arise from low-velocity microturbulent dissipation.

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