High-J CO Versus Far-Infrared Relations in Normal and Starburst Galaxies
Daizhong Liu, Yu Gao, Kate Isaak, Emanuele Daddi, Chentao Yang, Nanyao, Lu, Paul van der Werf

TL;DR
This study reveals that high-J CO line luminosities are linearly correlated with far-infrared luminosities across a wide range of galaxy types and redshifts, indicating a universal relation between dense molecular gas and star formation.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive analysis of CO high-J transition lines' correlation with FIR luminosity in local and high-redshift galaxies, extending the relation to Galactic objects.
Findings
All nine CO transition lines show tight, linear correlations with FIR luminosity.
The CO spectral line energy distribution (SLED) indicates average molecular gas properties.
High-J CO lines correlate with FIR luminosity across 15 orders of magnitude, from Galactic objects to distant galaxies.
Abstract
We present correlations between 9 CO transition ( to ) and beam-matched far-infrared (Far-IR) luminosities () among 167 local galaxies, using {\it{Herschel}} Spectral and Photometric Imaging Receiver Fourier Transform Spectrometer (SPIRE; FTS) spectroscopic data and Photoconductor Array Camera and Spectrometer (PACS) photometry data. We adopt entire-galaxy FIR luminosities () from the {\it{IRAS}} Revised Bright Galaxy Sample and correct to using PACS images to match the varying FTS beam sizes. All 9 correlations between and are essentially linear and tight (=0.2-0.3 dex dispersion), even for the highest transition, . This supports the notion that the star formation rate (SFR) is linearly correlated with the dense molecular gas…
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