Turbulent molecular gas and star formation in the shocked intergalactic medium of Stephan's Quintet
Pierre Guillard, Fran\c{c}ois Boulanger, Guillaume Pineau des, For\^ets, Edith Falgarone, Antoine Gusdorf, Michelle Cluver, Philip Appleton,, Ute Lisenfeld, Pierre-Alain Duc, Patrick Ogle, Kevin Xu

TL;DR
This study reveals that in Stephan's Quintet, turbulent molecular gas formed from diffuse gas in a galaxy collision exhibits high kinetic energy and low star formation efficiency, challenging typical star formation models.
Contribution
It provides detailed observations of molecular gas dynamics and turbulence in the intergalactic medium of Stephan's Quintet, highlighting the impact of galaxy collisions on gas properties.
Findings
Detected large molecular gas mass (~5x10^9 Msun) in the shock region.
Found turbulence energy exceeds thermal energy, inhibiting star formation.
Observed high turbulence and low star formation efficiency compared to typical galaxies.
Abstract
We report on single-dish radio CO observations towards the inter-galactic medium (IGM) of the Stephan's Quintet (SQ) group of galaxies. Extremely bright mid-IR H2 rotational line emission from warm molecular gas has been detected by Spitzer in the kpc-scale shock created by a galaxy collision. We detect in the IGM CO(1-0), (2-1) and (3-2) line emission with complex profiles, spanning a velocity range of 1000 km/s. The spectra exhibit the pre-shock recession velocities of the two colliding gas systems (5700 and 6700 km/s), but also intermediate velocities. This shows that much of the molecular gas has formed out of diffuse gas accelerated by the galaxy-tidal arm collision. A total H2 mass of 5x10^9 Msun is detected in the shock. The molecular gas carries a large fraction of the gas kinetic energy involved in the collision, meaning that this energy has not been thermalized yet. The…
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