Warm molecular hydrogen in the Spitzer SINGS galaxy sample
H. Roussel (1), G. Helou (2), D.J. Hollenbach (3), B.T. Draine (4),, J.D. Smith (5), L. Armus (2), E. Schinnerer (1), F. Walter (1), C.W., Engelbracht (5), M.D. Thornley (6), R.C. Kennicutt (7, 5), D. Calzetti, (8), D.A. Dale (9), E.J. Murphy (10), C. Bot (2) ((1) MPIA, Germany

TL;DR
This study analyzes warm molecular hydrogen in 57 normal galaxies from the SINGS sample, revealing its properties, excitation mechanisms, and relation to star formation and AGN activity, with implications for understanding the ISM.
Contribution
It extends extragalactic H2 surveys to more common systems, characterizes warm H2 properties across galaxy types, and identifies excitation sources and signatures of low-luminosity AGNs.
Findings
Warm H2 detected in 86% of galaxies with stellar mass >10^9.5 M_sun.
H2 emission correlates tightly with PAH emission, indicating PDR origin.
Excess H2 emission and warmer states in LINER/Sy galaxies suggest shock heating and AGN influence.
Abstract
(simplified) Results on the properties of warm H2 in 57 normal galaxies are derived from H2 rotational transitions, obtained as part of SINGS. This study extends previous extragalactic surveys of H2, the most abundant constituent of the molecular ISM, to more common systems (L_FIR = e7 to 6e10 L_sun) of all morphological and nuclear types. The S(1) transition is securely detected in the nuclear regions of 86% of SINGS galaxies with stellar masses above 10^9.5 M_sun. The derived column densities of warm H2 (T > ~100 K), even though averaged over kiloparsec-scale areas, are commensurate with those of resolved PDRs; the median of the sample is 3e20 cm-2. They amount to between 1% and >30% of the total H2. The power emitted in the sum of the S(0) to S(2) transitions is on average 30% of the [SiII] line power, and ~4e-4 of the total infrared power (TIR) within the same area for star-forming…
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