Molecular gas and Star Formation Properties in Early Stage Mergers: SMA CO(2-1) Observations of the LIRGs NGC 3110 and NGC 232
D. Espada, S. Martin, S. Verley, A. R. Pettitt, S. Matsushita, M., Argudo-Fernandez, Z. Randriamanakoto, P.-Y. Hsieh, T. Saito, R. E. Miura, Y., Kawana, J. Sabater, L. Verdes-Montenegro, P. T. P. Ho, R. Kawabe, and D. Iono

TL;DR
This study uses SMA CO(2-1) observations to analyze molecular gas and star formation in early-stage galaxy mergers NGC 3110 and NGC 232, revealing enhanced gas concentrations and starburst activity.
Contribution
First interferometric CO(2-1) maps of these early-stage mergers, linking gas properties with interaction stages and star formation.
Findings
Enhanced molecular gas surface densities in circumnuclear regions.
Starburst activity along spiral arms and circumnuclear zones.
Gas depletion times between 0.5 and 1 Gyr.
Abstract
Mergers of galaxies are an important mode for galaxy evolution because they serve as an efficient trigger of powerful starbursts. However, observational studies of the molecular gas properties during their early stages are scarce. We present interferometric CO(2-1) maps of two luminous infrared galaxies (LIRGs), NGC 3110 and NGC 232, obtained with the Submillimeter Array (SMA) with ~ 1 kpc resolution. While NGC 3110 is a spiral galaxy interacting with a minor (14:1 stellar mass) companion, NGC 232 is interacting with a similarly sized object. We find that such interactions have likely induced in these galaxies enhancements in the molecular gas content and central concentrations, partly at the expense of atomic gas. The obtained molecular gas surface densities in their circumnuclear regions are M pc, higher than in non-interacting objects…
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