Dense gas in low-metallicity galaxies
J. Braine, Y. Shimajiri, P. Andr\'e, S. Bontemps, Yu Gao, and Hao Chen, C. Kramer

TL;DR
This study investigates dense gas tracers in low-metallicity galaxies, revealing that HCO$^+$ is a reliable indicator of dense gas and star formation rate across different metallicities, with variations in nitrogen-bearing molecules.
Contribution
It provides new observations of low-metallicity galaxies, expanding the sample and analyzing the behavior of dense gas tracers like HCN and HCO$^+$ in these environments.
Findings
HCO$^+$ correlates linearly with star formation rate across metallicities.
Nitrogen-bearing molecules are weaker or undetected in low-metallicity galaxies.
HCO$^+$ is an effective and easily measurable dense gas tracer.
Abstract
Stars form out of the densest parts of molecular clouds. Far-IR emission can be used to estimate the Star Formation Rate (SFR) and high dipole moment molecules, typically HCN, trace the dense gas. A strong correlation exists between HCN and Far-IR emission, with the ratio being nearly constant, over a large range of physical scales. A few recent observations have found HCN to be weak with respect to the Far-IR and CO in subsolar metallicity (low-Z) objects. We present observations of the Local Group galaxies M33, IC10, and NGC6822 with the IRAM 30meter and NRO 45m telescopes, greatly improving the sample of low-Z galaxies observed. HCN, HCO, CS, CH, and HNC have been detected. Compared to solar metallicity galaxies, the Nitrogen-bearing species are weak (HCN, HNC) or not detected (CN, HNCO, NH) relative to Far-IR or CO emission. HCO and CH emission is normal with…
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