The X_CO conversion factor from galactic multiphase ISM simulations
Munan Gong, Eve C. Ostriker, Chang-Goo Kim

TL;DR
This study uses advanced galactic simulations to analyze how the CO-to-H2 conversion factor varies with physical and observational parameters, revealing its dependence on cloud age, environment, and resolution.
Contribution
It provides a detailed numerical analysis of X_CO's dependence on resolution, chemistry, and environment, improving understanding of CO as a molecular gas tracer.
Findings
X_CO is approximately 0.7-1.0×10^{20} cm^{-2}K^{-1}km^{-1}s, consistent with observations.
Younger clouds have lower X_CO and flatter X_CO vs. extinction profiles.
X_CO increases with observational beam size, and convergence depends on resolution.
Abstract
CO(J=1-0) line emission is a widely used observational tracer of molecular gas, rendering essential the X_CO factor, which is applied to convert CO luminosity to H_2 mass. We use numerical simulations to study how X_CO depends on numerical resolution, non-steady-state chemistry, physical environment, and observational beam size. Our study employs 3D magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) simulations of galactic disks with solar neighborhood conditions, where star formation and the three-phase interstellar medium (ISM) are self-consistently regulated by gravity and stellar feedback. Synthetic CO maps are obtained by post-processing the MHD simulations with chemistry and radiation transfer. We find that CO is only an approximate tracer of H_2. On parsec scales, W_CO is more fundamentally a measure of mass-weighted volume density, rather than H_2 column density. Nevertheless, $\langle X_\mathrm{CO}…
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