Modeling the H2O submillimeter emission in extragalactic sources
E. Gonz\'alez-Alfonso, J. Fischer, S. Aalto, N. Falstad

TL;DR
This paper models submillimeter H2O emission in extragalactic sources, revealing how different excitation conditions affect line formation, and compares models with observations to understand the physical environments of infrared galaxies.
Contribution
It introduces detailed models of H2O emission that distinguish excitation mechanisms and applies them to specific galaxies, advancing understanding of molecular excitation in infrared galaxies.
Findings
High-lying H2O lines form in very warm regions with high H2O columns.
Lower lines can be excited in moderately warm environments with lower H2O columns.
H2O-to-infrared luminosity ratio varies with dust temperature and line excitation energy.
Abstract
Recent observational studies have shown that H2O emission at (rest) submillimeter wavelengths is ubiquitous in infrared galaxies, both in the local and in the early Universe, suggestive of far-infrared pumping of H2O by dust in warm regions. In this work, models are presented that show that (i) the highest-lying H2O lines (E_{upper}>400 K) are formed in very warm (T_{dust}>~90 K) regions and require high H2O columns (N_{H2O}>~3x10^{17} cm^{-2}), while lower lying lines can be efficiently excited with T_{dust}~45-75 K and N_{H2O}~(0.5-2)x10^{17} cm^{-2}; (ii) significant collisional excitation of the lowest lying (E_{upper}<200 K) levels, which enhances the overall L_{H2O}-L_{IR} ratios, is identified in sources where the ground-state para-H2O 1_{11}-0_{00} line is detected in emission; (iii) the H2O-to-infrared (8-1000 um) luminosity ratio is expected to decrease with increasing…
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