Resolving the Far-IR Line Deficit: Photoelectric Heating and Far-IR Line Cooling in NGC 1097 and NGC 4559
Kevin V. Croxall, J. D. Smith, M. G. Wolfire, H. Roussel, K. M., Sandstrom, B. T. Draine, G. Aniano, D. A. Dale, L. Armus, P. Beir\~ao, G., Helou, A. D. Bolatto, P. N. Appleton, B. R. Brandl, D. Calzetti, A. F., Crocker, M. Galametz, B. A. Groves, C. N. Hao, L. K. Hunt

TL;DR
This study investigates the heating and cooling processes of interstellar medium in two galaxies using far-infrared line maps, revealing how photoelectric heating efficiency decreases with increasing infrared color and how small grains are affected in line-deficit regions.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the relationship between far-infrared line emission, PAH emission, and radiation fields at sub-kiloparsec scales in galaxies, linking line deficits to grain ionization effects.
Findings
Photoelectric heating efficiency decreases with warmer infrared colors.
Far-IR cooling to PAH ratio remains nearly constant across a range of colors.
Line deficits correlate with intense radiation fields and grain ionization.
Abstract
The physical state of interstellar gas and dust is dependent on the processes which heat and cool this medium. To probe heating and cooling of the ISM over a large range of infrared surface brightness, on sub-kiloparsec scales, we employ line maps of [C \ii] 158 m, [O \one] 63 m, and [N \ii] 122 m in NGC 1097 and NGC 4559, obtained with the PACS spectrometer onboard {\it Herschel}. We matched new observations to existing Spitzer-IRS data that trace the total emission of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs). We confirm at small scales in these galaxies that the canonical measure of photoelectric heating efficiency, ([C \ii] + [O \one])/TIR, decreases as the far-infrared color, (70 m)/(100 m), increases. In contrast, the ratio of far-infrared (far-IR) cooling to total PAH emission, ([C \ii] + [O \one])/PAH, is a near constant 6% over…
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