ALMA Reveals the Molecular Medium Fueling the Nearest Nuclear Starburst
Adam K. Leroy, Alberto D. Bolatto, Eve C. Ostriker, Erik Rosolowsky,, Fabian Walter, Steven R. Warren, Jennifer Donovan Meyer, Jacqueline Hodge,, David S. Meier, J\"urgen Ott, Karin Sandstrom, Andreas Schruba, Sylvain, Veilleux, Martin Zwaan

TL;DR
This study uses ALMA observations to analyze the molecular clouds fueling the nuclear starburst in NGC 253, revealing their properties, dynamics, and implications for star formation efficiency in starburst environments.
Contribution
It provides detailed measurements of molecular cloud properties and the starburst region structure, highlighting differences from typical galaxy disks and supporting mixed ISM phase models.
Findings
Massive (~10^7 M_sun) clouds with high densities and line widths.
Short free fall time (~0.7 Myr) explains efficient star formation.
Galactic-like CO-to-H2 conversion factor in the starburst region.
Abstract
We use ALMA to derive the mass, length, and time scales associated with the nuclear starburst in NGC 253. This region forms ~2 M_sun/yr of stars and resembles other starbursts in scaling relations, with star formation consuming the gas reservoir 10 times faster than in galaxy disks. We present observations of CO, the high effective density transitions HCN(1-0), HCO+(1-0), CS(2-1), and their isotopologues. We identify ten clouds that appear as peaks in line emission and enhancements in the HCN-to-CO ratio. These clouds are massive (~10^7 M_sun) structures with sizes (~30 pc) similar to GMCs in other systems. Compared to disk galaxy GMCs, they show high line widths (~20-40 km/s) given their size, with implied Mach numbers ~90. The clouds also show high surface (~6,000 M_sun/pc^2) and volume densities (n_H2~2,000 cm^-3). Given these, self-gravity can explain the line widths. This short…
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