The Atlas3D project - X. On the origin of the molecular and ionised gas in early-type galaxies
Timothy A. Davis, Katherine Alatalo, Marc Sarzi, Martin Bureau, Lisa, M. Young, Leo Blitz, Paolo Serra, Alison F. Crocker, Davor Krajnovi\'c,, Richard M. McDermid, Maxime Bois, Fr\'ed\'eric Bournaud, Michele Cappellari,, Roger L. Davies, Pierre-Alain Duc, P. Tim de Zeeuw

TL;DR
This study investigates the origin of molecular and ionised gas in early-type galaxies, revealing that external acquisition is common in fast rotators, especially in less dense environments, while internal processes dominate in dense clusters.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the environmental dependence and kinematic alignment of gas phases, highlighting the role of external accretion in galaxy evolution.
Findings
36% of fast rotators have misaligned ionised gas.
External gas acquisition is prevalent in field galaxies.
Dense environments favor internally sourced, aligned gas.
Abstract
We make use of interferometric CO and HI observations, and optical integral-field spectroscopy to probe the origin of the molecular and ionised interstellar medium (ISM) in local early-type galaxies (ETGs). We find that 36\pm5% of our sample of fast rotating ETGs have their ionised gas kinematically misaligned with respect to the stars, setting a strong lower limit on the importance of externally acquired gas (e.g. from mergers and cold accretion). Slow rotators have a flat distribution of misalignments, indicating that the dominant source of gas is external. The molecular, ionised and atomic gas in all the detected galaxies are always kinematically aligned, even when they are misaligned from the stars, suggesting that all these three phases of the ISM share a common origin. In addition, we find that the origin of the cold and warm gas in fast-rotating ETGs is strongly affected by…
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