The Redshift Search Receiver 3 mm Wavelength Spectra of 10 Galaxies
Ronald L. Snell, Gopal Narayanan, Min S. Yun, Mark Heyer, Aeree Chung,, William M. Irvine, Neal R. Erickson, and Guilin Liu

TL;DR
This study uses a new broadband receiver to obtain 3 mm spectra of 10 galaxies, detecting multiple molecular lines and analyzing their ratios to infer properties of molecular gas and its relation to galactic activity.
Contribution
Introduction of the Redshift Search Receiver (RSR) enabling broadband spectral observations of galaxies and detailed analysis of molecular line ratios in their central regions.
Findings
Detected 20 spectral lines from 14 molecular species.
Line ratios vary with galaxy, indicating different molecular gas conditions.
High HCO+/HCN ratios suggest active galactic nucleus influence.
Abstract
The 3 mm wavelength spectra of 10 galaxies have been obtained at the Five College Radio Astronomy Observatory using a new, very broadband receiver and spectrometer, called the Redshift Search Receiver (RSR). The RSR has an instantaneous bandwidth of 37 GHz covering frequencies from 74 to 111 GHz, and has a spectral resolution of 31 MHz (~100 km/s). During tests of the RSR on the FCRAO 14 m telescope the complete 3 mm spectra of the central regions of NGC 253, Maffei 2, NGC1068, IC 342, M82, NGC 3079, NGC 3690, NGC 4258, Arp 220 and NGC 6240 were obtained. Within the wavelength band covered by the RSR, 20 spectral lines from 14 different atomic and molecular species were detected. Based on simultaneous fits to the spectrum of each galaxy, a number of key molecular line ratios are derived. A simple model which assumes the emission arises from an ensemble of Milky Way-like Giant Nolecular…
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