Herschel-SPIRE-Fourier Transform Spectroscopy of the nearby spiral galaxy IC342
D. Rigopoulou, P.D. Hurley, B.M. Swinyard, J. Virdee, K.V. Croxall,, R.H.B. Hopwood, T. Lim, G.E. Magdis, C.P. Pearson, E. Pellegrini, E., Polehampton, J-D. Smith

TL;DR
This study uses Herschel SPIRE Fourier Transform Spectroscopy to analyze the molecular and atomic gas in galaxy IC342, revealing a warm gas component and insights into PDRs through CO, [CI], and [NII] line observations.
Contribution
First detection of high-J CO lines in IC342 with detailed radiative transfer modeling, confirming a warm gas component and providing new insights into PDRs in the galaxy.
Findings
Identification of two CO components at 35 K and 400 K.
Warm gas constitutes 10% of cold gas mass but dominates CO luminosity.
[CI] likely originates in a thin layer on molecular cloud surfaces.
Abstract
We present observations of the nearby spiral galaxy IC342 with the Herschel Spectral and Photometric Imaging Receiver (SPIRE) Fourier Transform Spectrometer. The spectral range afforded by SPIRE, 196-671 microns, allows us to access a number of 12CO lines from J=4--3 to J=13--12 with the highest J transitions observed for the first time. In addition we present measurements of 13CO, [CI] and [NII]. We use a radiative transfer code coupled with Bayesian likelihood analysis to model and constrain the temperature, density and column density of the gas. We find two 12CO components, one at 35 K and one at 400 K with CO column densities of 6.3x10^{17} cm^{-2} and 0.4x10^{17} cm^{-2} and CO gas masses of 1.26x10^{7} Msolar and 0.15x10^{7} Msolar, for the cold and warm components, respectively. The inclusion of the high-J 12CO line observations, indicate the existence of a much warmer gas…
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