Molecular gas heating in Arp 299
M.J.F. Rosenberg, R. Meijerink, F.P. Israel, P.P. van der, Werf, E.M. Xilouris, A. Wei{\ss}

TL;DR
This study investigates the heating mechanisms of molecular gas in Arp 299, revealing that mechanical heating combined with UV radiation best explains the observed molecular emission lines, especially high-J CO and HCN transitions.
Contribution
It demonstrates that mechanical heating, alongside UV radiation, is essential to accurately model molecular gas heating in a luminous infrared galaxy, challenging the dominance of PDRs.
Findings
High-J CO lines are brighter in Arp 299 A than B+C.
Extreme PDRs cannot account for all molecular heating.
Mechanical heating contributes about 4% of total heating in Arp 299 A.
Abstract
Understanding the heating and cooling mechanisms in nearby (Ultra) luminous infrared galaxies can give us insight into the driving mechanisms in their more distant counterparts. Molecular emission lines play a crucial role in cooling excited gas, and recently, with Herschel Space Observatory we have been able to observe the rich molecular spectrum. CO is the most abundant and one of the brightest molecules in the Herschel wavelength range. CO transitions are observed with Herschel, and together, these lines trace the excitation of CO. We study Arp 299, a colliding galaxy group, with one component harboring an AGN and two more undergoing intense star formation. For Arp 299 A, we present PACS spectrometer observations of high-J CO lines up to J=20-19 and JCMT observations of CO and HCN to discern between UV heating and alternative heating mechanisms. There is an immediately…
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