Role of Electon Excitation and Nature of Molecular Gas in Cluster Central Elliptical Galaxies
Jeremy Lim, Dinh-V-Trung, Jan Vrtilek, Laurence P. David, William, Forman

TL;DR
This study investigates the physical properties and excitation mechanisms of molecular gas in the central elliptical galaxy NGC 1275, revealing higher temperatures, densities, and ionization than typical galactic clouds, with implications for gas mass estimates.
Contribution
It provides new constraints on the temperature, density, and ionization of molecular gas in a cluster galaxy, and proposes a turbulence-supported model over virialized clouds.
Findings
Molecular gas has temperature >20 K and density 10^2-10^4 cm^-3.
Electron collisions dominate excitation of molecules like HCN, HCO+, and CN.
Molecular filaments are pressure-confined, thin, turbulence-supported structures.
Abstract
We present observations in CO(3-2) that, combined with previous observations in CO(2-1), constrain the physical properties of the filamentary molecular gas in the central 6.5 kpc of NGC 1275, the central giant elliptical galaxy of the Perseus cluster. We find this molecular gas to have a temperature K and a density -, typically warmer and denser than the bulk of Giant Molecular Clouds (GMCs) in the Galaxy. Bathed in the harsh radiation and particle field of the surrounding intracluster X-ray gas, the molecular gas likely has a much higher ionization fraction than that of GMCs. For an ionization fraction of , similar to that of Galactic diffuse () partially-molecular clouds that emit in HCN(1-0) and HCO(1-0), we show that the same gas traced in CO can produce the previously reported…
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