Strong Far-IR Cooling Lines, Peculiar CO Kinematics and Possible Star Formation Suppression in Hickson Compact Group 57
K. Alatalo (1,2), P. N. Appleton (1,2), U. Lisenfeld (3), T., Bitsakis (2,4), P. Guillard (5), V. Charmandaris (6,7,8), M. Cluver, (9), M. A. Dopita (10, 11, 12), E. Freeland (13), T. Jarrett (9) and, L. J. Kewley (10), P. M. Ogle (1), J. Rasmussen (14, 15), J. A. Rich, (1,16)

TL;DR
This study investigates the unusual interstellar medium conditions and star formation suppression in Hickson Compact Group 57, revealing shock heating, peculiar gas kinematics, and potential collision-induced star formation quenching.
Contribution
It provides new multi-line observations showing shock heating as an alternative to photoelectric heating and links disturbed gas kinematics to star formation suppression in compact galaxy groups.
Findings
HCG 57d shows strong [C II] emission with weak CO(1-0)
HCG 57a exhibits both strong [C II] and CO(1-0) emissions
Star formation is suppressed by a factor of 10-30 in disturbed regions
Abstract
We present [C II] and [O I] observations from Herschel and CO(1-0) maps from the Combined Array for{\dag} Research in Millimeter Astronomy (CARMA) of the Hickson Compact Group HCG 57, focusing on the galaxies HCG 57a and HCG 57d. HCG 57a has been previously shown to contain enhanced quantities of warm molecular hydrogen consistent with shock and/or turbulent heating. Our observations show that HCG 57d has strong [C II] emission compared to L and weak CO(1-0), while in HCG 57a, both the [C II] and CO(1-0) are strong. HCG 57a lies at the upper end of the normal distribution of [C II]/CO and [C II]/FIR ratios, and its far-IR cooling supports a low density warm diffuse gas that falls close to the boundary of acceptable PDR models. However, the power radiated in the [C II] and warm H emission have similar magnitudes, as seen in other shock-dominated systems and predicted by…
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