CO map and steep Kennicutt-Schmidt relation in the extended UV disk of M63
M. Dessauges-Zavadsky (1), C. Verdugo (2), F. Combes (2), D., Pfenniger (1) ((1) Geneva Observatory, University of Geneva, Switzerland, (2), Observatoire de Paris, LERMA, France)

TL;DR
This study investigates the extended UV disk of galaxy M63, revealing molecular gas presence and a steep, nonlinear Kennicutt-Schmidt relation in outer regions, challenging traditional star formation models.
Contribution
It provides the first deep CO observations of M63's extended UV disk, showing molecular gas detection and a steep K-S relation beyond the optical radius.
Findings
CO detected out to r25 along the major axis
Steep, nonlinear K-S relation in outer UV regions
HI likely precursor to H2 in outer disk
Abstract
Results from the UV satellite GALEX revealed large extensions of disks in some nearby spiral galaxies, extending out to 3 to 4 times the isophotal radius, r25. M63 is a remarkable example of a spiral galaxy with one of the most extended UV disks, so it offers the opportunity to search for the molecular gas and characterize the star formation in outer disk regions as revealed by the UV emission. We obtained deep CO(1-0) and CO(2-1) observations on the IRAM 30 m telescope along the major axis of the M63 disk from the center out to the galactocentric radius rgal = 1.6 r25 and over a bright UV region at rgal = 1.36 r25. CO(1-0) is detected all along the M63 major axis out to r25, and CO(2-1) is confined to rgal = 0.68 r25, which may betray lower excitation temperatures in the outer disk. CO(1-0) is also detected in the external bright UV region of M63. The radial profiles of the CO emission…
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