# Spatially resolved carbon and oxygen isotopic ratios in NGC 253 using   optically thin tracers

**Authors:** S. Martin, S. Muller, C. Henkel, D. S. Meier, R. Aladro, K. Sakamoto,, P. P. van der Werf

arXiv: 1903.03244 · 2019-04-24

## TL;DR

This study spatially mapped carbon and oxygen isotope ratios in NGC 253's central molecular zone, revealing isotope enrichment patterns linked to stellar nucleosynthesis and complex gas mixing, with implications for understanding galactic chemical evolution.

## Contribution

First extragalactic detection of the double isotopologue $^{13}$C$^{18}$O and detailed spatially resolved isotope ratio measurements in NGC 253.

## Key findings

- Isotopic ratios differ from typical galaxy nucleus values.
- Enrichment of $^{18}$O suggests massive star contributions.
- Evidence for mixing of processed and less processed gas components.

## Abstract

To trace chemical evolution in a prototypical starburst environment, we spatially resolve the carbon and oxygen isotope ratios across the central molecular zone (full size ~$\sim 600$ pc) in the nearby starburst galaxy NGC 253. We imaged the emission of the optically thin isotopologues $^{13}$CO, C$^{18}$O, C$^{17}$O, $^{13}$C$^{18}$O at a spatial resolution $\sim50$ pc, comparable to the typical size of giant molecular associations. Optical depth effects and contamination of $^{13}$C$^{18}$O by C$_4$H is discussed and accounted for to derive column densities. This is the first extragalactic detection of the double isotopologue $^{13}$C$^{18}$O. Derived isotopic ratios $^{12}$C/$^{13}$C$\sim21\pm6$, $^{16}$O/$^{18}$O$\sim130\pm40$, and $^{18}$O/$^{17}$O$\sim4.5\pm0.8$ differ from the generally adopted values in the nuclei of galaxies. The molecular clouds in the central region of NGC 253 show similar rare isotope enrichment to those within the central molecular zone of the Milky way. This enrichment is attributed to stellar nucleosynthesis. Measured isotopic ratios suggest an enhancement of $^{18}$O as compared to our Galactic center, which we attribute to an extra $^{18}$O injection from massive stars. Our observations show evidence for mixing of distinct gas components with different degrees of processing. We observe an extra molecular component of highly processed gas on top of the already proposed less processed gas being transported to the central region of NGC 253. Such multicomponent nature and optical depth effects may hinder the use of isotopic ratios based on spatially unresolved line to infer the star formation history and/or initial stellar mass function properties in the nuclei of galaxies.

## Full text

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## Figures

15 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1903.03244/full.md

## References

58 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1903.03244/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1903.03244