Molecular Gas in SAURON Early-Type Galaxies: Detection of 13CO and HCN Emission
M. Krips, A.F.Crocker, M. Bureau, F. Combes, and L.M. Young

TL;DR
This study detects and analyzes molecular gas emissions in early-type galaxies, revealing that their star formation properties and molecular line ratios resemble those of normal star-forming galaxies rather than starbursts.
Contribution
First detection of 13CO and HCN emissions in SAURON early-type galaxies, providing insights into their molecular gas properties and star formation activity.
Findings
13CO detected in all four galaxies; HCN detected in three.
Ratios of molecular lines resemble those in normal star-forming galaxies.
Star formation rates are lower than in starburst galaxies, following standard correlations.
Abstract
In a pilot project to study the relationship between star formation and molecular gas properties in nearby normal early-type galaxies, we used the IRAM 30m telescope to observe the 13CO(J=1-0), 13CO(J=2-1), HCN(J=1-0) and HCO+(J=1-0) line emission in the four galaxies of the SAURON sample with the strongest 12CO emission. We report the detection of 13CO emission in all four SAURON sources and HCN emission in three sources, while no HCO+ emission was found to our detection limits in any of the four galaxies. We find that the 13CO/12CO ratios of three SAURON galaxies are somewhat higher than those in galaxies of different Hubble types. The HCN/12CO and HCN/13CO ratios of all four SAURON galaxies resemble those of nearby Seyfert and dwarf galaxies with normal star formation rates, rather than those of starburst galaxies. The HCN/HCO+ ratio is found to be relatively high (i.e., >1) in the…
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