Chemical evolution of giant molecular clouds in simulations of galaxies
Alexander J. Richings, Joop Schaye

TL;DR
This study uses hydrodynamic simulations to analyze the chemical evolution of giant molecular clouds in galaxies, focusing on molecular abundances, CO emission, and the X_CO factor, revealing age and metallicity dependencies.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed non-equilibrium chemical model in galaxy simulations, exploring molecular evolution and CO emission in GMCs across different metallicities and resolutions.
Findings
GMCs have median lifetimes of ~13 Myr, matching observations.
Young clouds at low metallicity are underabundant in H2 and CO.
CO emission correlates with dust extinction and varies with metallicity.
Abstract
We present an analysis of Giant Molecular Clouds (GMCs) within hydrodynamic simulations of isolated, low-mass (M* ~ 10^9 M_sol) disc galaxies. We study the evolution of molecular abundances and the implications for CO emission and the X_CO conversion factor in individual clouds. We define clouds either as regions above a density threshold n_H,min = 10 cm^-3, or using an observationally motivated CO intensity threshold of 0.25 K km s^-1. Our simulations include a non-equilibrium chemical model with 157 species, including 20 molecules. We also investigate the effects of resolution and pressure floors (i.e. Jeans limiters). We find cloud lifetimes up to ~40 Myr, with a median of 13 Myr, in agreement with observations. At one tenth solar metallicity, young clouds (<10-15 Myr) are underabundant in H2 and CO compared to chemical equilibrium, by factors of ~3 and 1-2 orders of magnitude,…
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