ALMA Multi-line Observations of the IR-bright Merger VV 114
Toshiki Saito, Daisuke Iono, Min S. Yun, Junko Ueda, Kouichiro, Nakanishi, Hajime Sugai, Daniel Espada, Masatoshi Imanishi, Kentaro Motohara,, Yoshiaki Hagiwara, Ken Tateuchi, Minju Lee, and Ryohei Kawabe

TL;DR
This study uses ALMA observations to analyze the molecular gas distribution, kinematics, and excitation conditions in the IR-bright galaxy merger VV 114, revealing diverse gas components and new insights into galaxy interaction processes.
Contribution
It provides the first detection of extranuclear CH3OH emission in interacting galaxies and characterizes multiple molecular gas components with distinct physical conditions.
Findings
Molecular line ratios vary across the system, indicating diverse excitation conditions.
Detection of extranuclear CH3OH emission in an interacting galaxy.
Identification of five distinct molecular gas components with different physical states.
Abstract
We present ALMA cycle 0 observations of the molecular gas and dust in the IR-bright mid-stage merger VV114 obtained at 160 - 800 pc resolution. The main aim of this study is to investigate the distribution and kinematics of the cold/warm gas and to quantify the spatial variation of the excitation conditions across the two merging disks. The data contain 10 molecular lines, including the first detection of extranuclear CH3OH emission in interacting galaxies, as well as continuum emission. We map the 12CO(3-2)/12CO(1-0) and the 12CO(1-0)/13CO(1-0) line ratio at 800 pc resolution (in the units of K km/s), and find that these ratios vary from 0.2 - 0.8 and 5 - 50, respectively. Conversely, the 200 pc resolution HCN(4-3)/HCO+(4-3) line ratio shows low values (< 0.5) at a filament across the disks except for the unresolved eastern nucleus which is three times higher (1.34 +/- 0.09). We…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
