Constraining cloud parameters using high density gas tracers in galaxies
M. V. Kazandjian, I. Pelupessy, R. Meijerink, F. P. Israel, C. M., Coppola, M. J. F. Rosenberg, M. Spaans

TL;DR
This study models high-density molecular gas emission in galaxies to constrain interstellar medium parameters, revealing that broad density distributions with high Mach numbers are necessary to explain observed line ratios in star-forming galaxies.
Contribution
It introduces a method to constrain galactic cloud parameters using high-density gas tracers and models the impact of density PDFs on molecular line emission.
Findings
Most emission originates from gas densities 10-1000 cm-3.
Broad density PDFs with high Mach numbers are needed for significant high-density emission.
Mach numbers between 29 and 77 are constrained for LIRGs and ULIRGs.
Abstract
Far-infrared molecular emission is an important tool used to understand the excitation mechanisms of the gas in the inter-stellar medium of star-forming galaxies. In the present work, we model the emission from rotational transitions with critical densities n >~ 10^4 cm-3. We include 4-3 < J <= 15-14 transitions of CO and 13CO, in addition to J <= 7-6 transitions of HCN, HNC, and HCO+ on galactic scales. We do this by re-sampling high density gas in a hydrodynamic model of a gas-rich disk galaxy, assuming that the density field of the interstellar medium of the model galaxy follows the probability density function (PDF) inferred from the resolved low density scales. We find that in a narrow gas density PDF, with a mean density of ~10 cm-3 and a dispersion \sigma = 2.1 in the log of the density, most of the emission of molecular lines, emanates from the 10-1000 cm-3 part of the PDF. We…
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