Modeling CO Emission: II. The Physical Characteristics that Determine the X factor in Galactic Molecular Clouds
Rahul Shetty, Simon C. Glover, Cornelis P. Dullemond, Eve C. Ostriker,, Andrew I. Harris, Ralf S. Klessen

TL;DR
This study explores how physical properties like velocity, density, and temperature influence the CO-to-H2 conversion factor (X) in Galactic molecular clouds, revealing that X remains relatively constant due to limited property ranges.
Contribution
It demonstrates that the observed constancy of X in Galactic clouds arises from limited physical property ranges, challenging the necessity of virialization or linewidth-size relations for explaining X.
Findings
X factor is primarily determined by velocity and density ranges.
Temperature variations have minimal impact on X within typical cloud conditions.
Larger linewidths correlate with lower X, scaling as sigma^-1/2.
Abstract
We investigate how the X factor, the ratio of H_2 column density (NH2) to velocity-integrated CO intensity (W), is determined by the physical properties of gas in model molecular clouds (MCs). We perform radiative transfer calculations on chemical-MHD models to compute X. Using integrated NH2 and W reproduces the limited range in X found in observations, resulting in a mean value X=2\times10^20 s/cm^2/K^1/km^1 from the Galactic MC model. However, in limited velocity intervals, X can take on a much larger range due to CO line saturation. Thus, X strongly depends on both the range in gas velocities and volume densities. The temperature (T) variations within individual MCs do not strongly affect X, as dense gas contributes most to setting X. For fixed velocity and density structure, gas with higher T has higher W, yielding X ~ T^-1/2 for T~20-100 K. We demonstrate that the linewidth-size…
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