VALES V: A kinematic analysis of the molecular gas content in $H$-ATLAS galaxies at $z\sim0.03-0.35$ using ALMA
J. Molina, Edo Ibar, V. Villanueva, A. Escala, C. Cheng, M. Baes, H., Messias, C. Yang, F. E. Bauer, P. van der Werf, R. Leiton, M. Aravena, A. M., Swinbank, M. J. Micha{\l}owski, A. M. Mu\~noz-Arancibia, G. Orellana, T. M., Hughes, D. Farrah, G. De Zotti, M. A. Lara-L\'opez

TL;DR
This study uses ALMA observations of 39 galaxies at redshifts 0.03 to 0.35 to explore how galactic dynamics influence molecular gas properties and star formation, revealing links between kinematics, ISM conditions, and star formation efficiency.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed kinematic analysis of molecular gas in a sample of low-redshift galaxies, connecting dynamical states with ISM properties and star formation processes.
Findings
IR luminosity correlates with rotational velocity ratio.
[CII] deficit relates to galaxy dynamics.
Star formation efficiency is constant per crossing time.
Abstract
We present Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) resolved observations of molecular gas in galaxies up to to characterise the role of global galactic dynamics on the global interstellar medium (ISM) properties. These observations consist of a sub-sample of 39 galaxies taken from the Valpara\'iso ALMA Line Emission Survey (VALES). From the CO( emission line, we quantify the kinematic parameters by modelling the velocity fields. We find that the IR luminosity increases with the rotational to dispersion velocity ratio (, corrected for inclination). We find a dependence between and the [CII]/IR ratio, suggesting that the so-called `[CII] deficit' is related to the dynamical state of the galaxies. We find that global pressure support is needed to reconcile the dynamical mass estimates with the stellar masses in our…
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