Dense Molecular Gas Excitation in Nuclear Starbursts at High Redshift: HCN, HNC, and HCO+(J=6-5) Emission in the z=3.91 Quasar Host of APM08279+5255
Dominik A. Riechers (1,6), Axel Weiss (2), Fabian Walter (3), and Jeff, Wagg (4,5) ((1) Caltech, (2) MPIfR, (3) MPIA, (4) NRAO, (5) ESO, (6) Hubble, Fellow)

TL;DR
This study detects strong high-J molecular line emissions in a high-redshift quasar host, revealing that infrared pumping and radiative processes significantly excite dense molecular gas, challenging standard assumptions about star formation indicators.
Contribution
It demonstrates that high-J molecular line emissions in a z=3.91 quasar host are predominantly excited by infrared pumping, not just collisions, affecting molecular gas mass estimates.
Findings
High line ratios indicate exceptional excitation conditions.
Infrared pumping significantly influences molecular line emissions.
Standard conversion factors overestimate dense gas mass.
Abstract
We report the detection of surprisingly strong HCN, HNC, and HCO+(J=6-5) emission in the host galaxy of the z=3.91 quasar APM08279+5255 through observations with CARMA. HCN, HNC, and HCO+ are typically used as star formation indicators, tracing dense molecular hydrogen gas [n(H2) > 10^5,cm^-3] within star-forming molecular clouds. However, the strength of their respective line emission in the J=6-5 transitions in APM08279+5255 is extremely high, suggesting that they are excited by another mechanism besides collisions in the dense molecular gas phase alone. We derive J=6-5 line luminosities of L'(HCN)=(4.9+/-0.6), L'(HNC)=(2.4+/-0.7), and L'(HCO+)=(3.0+/-0.6)x10^10 (mu_L)^-1 K km/s pc^2 (where mu_L is the lensing magnification factor), corresponding to L' ratios of ~0.23-0.46 relative to CO(J=1-0). Such high line ratios would be unusual even in the respective ground-state (J=1-0)…
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