The molecular gas in Luminous Infrared Galaxies I: CO lines, extreme physical conditions, and their drivers
Padelis P. Papadopoulos, Paul van der Werf, E. M. Xilouris, Kate G., Isaak, Yu Gao, Stefanie Muehle

TL;DR
This study analyzes CO line emissions in 70 local Luminous Infrared Galaxies, revealing diverse extreme ISM conditions, with high excitation states driven by turbulence and cosmic rays, especially in merger-driven starbursts.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive survey of CO lines in LIRGs, highlighting the prevalence of warm, dense, and highly excited molecular gas driven by turbulence and cosmic rays.
Findings
Most LIRGs have a warm, dense molecular gas component.
High excitation CO SLEDs are common, especially in ULIRGs.
Turbulence and cosmic rays drive the extreme ISM conditions.
Abstract
We report results from a large molecular line survey of Luminous Infrared Galaxies (L_{IR} >= 10^{11} L_sol) in the local Universe (z<=0.1), conducted during the last decade with the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT) and the IRAM 30-m telescope. This work presents the CO and {13}CO line data for 36 galaxies, further augmented by multi-J total CO luminosities available for other IR-bright galaxies from the literature. This yields a sample of N=70 galaxies with the star-formation (SF) powered fraction of their IR luminosities spanning L_{IR} (10^{10}-2x10^{12}) L_sol and a wide range of morphologies. Simple comparisons of their available CO Spectral Line Energy Distributions (SLEDs) with local ones, as well as radiative transfer models discern a surprisingly wide range of average ISM conditions, with most of the surprises found in the high-excitation regime. These take the form of…
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