High-Resolution Radio Continuum Measurements of the Nuclear Disks of Arp 220
Loreto Barcos-Mu\~noz, Adam K. Leroy, Aaron S. Evans, George C., Privon, Lee Armus, Jim Condon, Joseph M. Mazzarella, David S. Meier, Emmanuel, Momjian, Eric J. Murphy, Juerguen Ott, Ashely Reichardt, Kazushi Sakamoto,, David B. Sanders, Eva Schinnerer, Sabrina Stierwalt

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution radio imaging to analyze the nuclear regions of Arp 220, revealing detailed morphologies, high star formation densities, and insights into cosmic ray cooling, with no clear evidence of active galactic nuclei dominance.
Contribution
First high-resolution 33 GHz radio images of Arp 220's nuclei, revealing detailed morphologies and extreme star formation surface densities, advancing understanding of ULIRG nuclear regions.
Findings
Radio emission is mostly synchrotron and follows exponential profiles.
Nuclei have extremely high luminosity and star formation rate surface densities.
Nuclei are below the dusty Eddington limit and are transparent between 5-350 GHz.
Abstract
We present new Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array radio continuum images of the nuclei of Arp 220, the nearest ultra-luminous infrared galaxy. These images have both the angular resolution to study detailed morphologies of the two nuclei that power the system and sensitivity to a wide range of spatial scales. At 33 GHz, and with a resolution of 0".081 x 0".063 (29.9 x 23.3 pc), we resolve the emission surrounding both nuclei and conclude that is mostly synchrotron in nature. The spatial distributions of radio emission in both nuclei are well described by exponential profiles. These have deconvolved half-light radii of 51 and 35 pc for the eastern and western nuclei, and they match the number density profile of radio supernovae observed with very long baseline interferometry. This similarity might be due to the fast cooling of cosmic rays electrons caused by the presence of a strong (~ mG)…
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