Warm Molecular Hydrogen Emission in Normal Edge-On Galaxies NGC 4565 and NGC 5907
Seppo Laine, Philip N. Appleton, Stephen T. Gottesman, Matthew L.N., Ashby, Catherine A. Garland

TL;DR
This study detects widespread warm molecular hydrogen in two edge-on galaxies, revealing that its excitation is likely independent of star formation activity and cannot account for dark matter.
Contribution
First detection of extensive warm molecular hydrogen in NGC 4565 and NGC 5907, showing excitation mechanisms are broad and not solely UV-driven, challenging previous dark matter hypotheses.
Findings
H2 emission detected up to 15 kpc from galaxy centers.
H2 excitation temperature remains constant across radii.
Warm H2 mass surface densities are insufficient to explain galaxy rotation speeds.
Abstract
We have observed warm molecular hydrogen in two nearby edge-on disk galaxies, NGC 4565 and NGC 5907, using the Spitzer high-resolution infrared spectrograph. The 0-0 S(0) 28.2 micron and 0-0 S(1) 17.0 micron pure rotational lines were detected out to 10 kpc from the center of each galaxy on both sides of the major axis, and in NGC 4565 the S(0) line was detected at r = 15 kpc on one side. This location lies beyond a steep drop in the radio continuum emission from cosmic rays in the disk. Despite indications that star formation activity decreases with radius, the H2 excitation temperature and the ratio of the H2 line and the far-IR luminosity surface densities, Sigma_L(H2}/Sigma_L(TIR}, change very little as a function of radius, even into the diffuse outer region of the disk of NGC 4565. This suggests that the source of excitation of the H2 operates over a large range of radii, and is…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
