ALMA CO(2-1) observations in the XUV disk of M83
Isadora C. Bicalho, Francoise Combes, Monica Rubio, Celia Verdugo and, Philippe Salome

TL;DR
This study used ALMA to observe CO(2-1) in the outer UV-bright regions of M83, finding no direct molecular gas detection but suggesting the presence of CO-dark H2 due to strong UV radiation.
Contribution
First high-resolution ALMA observations of molecular gas in the XUV disk of M83, revealing the potential prevalence of CO-dark molecular gas in outer galaxy regions.
Findings
No CO detection in targeted UV-bright outer regions.
Tentative H2 detection via stacking, indicating low H2/HI ratio.
CO-dark molecular gas likely due to intense UV radiation.
Abstract
The extended ultraviolet (XUV) disk galaxies are one of the most interesting objects studied in the last few years. The UV emission, revealed by GALEX, extends well beyond the optical disk, after the drop of H emission, the usual tracer of star formation. This shows that sporadic star formation can occur in a large fraction of the HI disk, at radii up to 3 or 4 times the optical radius. In most galaxies, these regions are poor in stars and dominated by under-recycled gas, therefore bear some similarity to early stages of spiral galaxies and high-redshift galaxies. One remarkable example is M83, a nearby galaxy with an extended UV disk reaching 2 times the optical radius. It offers the opportunity to search for the molecular gas and characterise the star formation in outer disk regions, traced by the UV emission. We obtained CO(2-1) observations with ALMA of a small region in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Spectroscopy and Laser Applications · Phase Equilibria and Thermodynamics
