Molecular gas heating mechanisms, and star formation feedback in merger/s tarbursts: NGC 6240 and Arp 193 as case studies
Padelis P. Papadopoulos, Zhi-Yu Zhang, E. M. Xilouris, Axel Weiss,, Paul van der Werf, Frank. P. Israel, Thomas. R. Greve, Kate G. Isaak, and Yu, Gao

TL;DR
This study uses Herschel observations of CO spectral lines to compare the molecular gas heating and star formation feedback in two merger/starburst galaxies, revealing significant differences in dense gas fractions and thermal states.
Contribution
It provides detailed CO SLEDs for Arp 193 and NGC 6240, highlighting how star formation feedback influences molecular gas properties in merger/starbursts.
Findings
NGC 6240 has a higher CO excitation than Arp 193.
Most molecular gas in NGC 6240 is dense, unlike in Arp 193.
Thermal states of molecular gas often exceed PDR capabilities in these galaxies.
Abstract
We used the SPIRE/FTS instrument aboard the Herschel Space Observatory (HSO) to obtain the Spectral Line Energy Distributions (SLEDs) of CO from J=4-3 to J=13-12 of Arp 193 and NGC 6240, two classical merger/starbursts selected from our molecular line survey of local Luminous Infrared Galaxies (LIRGs: L_{IR}>=10^{11} L_{sol}). The high-J CO SLEDs are then combined with ground-based low-J CO, {13}CO, HCN, HCO+, CS line data and used to probe the thermal and dynamical states of their large molecular gas reservoirs. We find the two CO SLEDs strongly diverging from J=4-3 onwards, with NGC6240 having a much higher CO line excitation than Arp193, despite their similar low-J CO SLEDs and L_{FIR}/L_{CO,1-0}, L_{HCN}/L_{CO} (J=1-0) ratios (proxies of star formation efficiency and dense gas mass fraction). In Arp193, one of the three most extreme starbursts in the local Universe, the molecular…
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