Velocity resolved [CII] spectroscopy of the center and the BCLMP302 region of M33 (HerM33es)
B. Mookerjea, F. Israel, C. Kramer, T. Nikola, J. Braine, V., Ossenkopf, M. Roellig, C. Henkel, P. van der Werf, F. van der Tak, M. C., Wiedner

TL;DR
This study uses velocity-resolved [CII] spectroscopy combined with other observations to analyze the contributions of ionized, atomic, and molecular gas to [CII] emission in M33, revealing significant variations and the presence of CO-dark molecular gas.
Contribution
It provides the first velocity-resolved analysis of [CII] emission in M33, decomposing contributions from different ISM phases at 50pc resolution.
Findings
A significant fraction of [CII] emission arises from CO-dark molecular gas.
The relative contributions of gas phases vary with local conditions and geometry.
Ionized gas contributes 10-25% to [CII] emission in some regions.
Abstract
We aim to understand the contribution of the ionized, atomic and molecular phases of the ISM to the [CII] emission from clouds near the dynamical center and the BCLMP302 HII region in the north of the nearby galaxy M33 at a spatial resolution of 50pc. We combine high resolution [CII] spectra taken with the HIFI spectrometer onboard the Herschel satellite with [CII] Herschel-PACS maps and ground-based observations of CO(2-1) and HI. All data are at a common spatial resolution of 50pc. Typically, the [CII] lines have widths intermediate between the narrower CO(2-1) and broader HI line profiles. We decomposed the [CII] spectra in terms of contribution from molecular and atomic gas detected in CO(2-1) and HI, respectively. We find that the relative contribution of molecular and atomic gas traced by CO(2-1) and HI varies depends mostly on the local physical conditions and geometry. We…
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