The unusual ISM in Blue and Dusty Gas Rich Galaxies (BADGRS)
L. Dunne, Z. Zhang, P. de Vis, C. J. R. Clark, I. Oteo, S. J. Maddox,, P. Cigan, G.de Zotti, H. L. Gomez, R. J. Ivison, K. Rowlands, M. W. L. Smith,, P. van der Werf, C. Vlahakis, J. S. Millard

TL;DR
This study investigates the molecular interstellar medium in a unique class of local, dust-rich, blue galaxies called BADGRS, revealing unexpectedly low CO emissions, cold dust temperatures, and implications for star formation and dust properties.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of the molecular ISM in BADGRS, highlighting their unusual low CO brightness and cold dust temperatures, and suggests different dust and star formation characteristics.
Findings
Low CO brightness despite bright far-infrared emission.
Molecular gas depletion timescales are shorter than in typical spirals.
Cold dust temperatures imply a lower interstellar radiation field.
Abstract
The Herschel-ATLAS unbiased survey of cold dust in the local Universe is dominated by a surprising population of very blue (FUV-K < 3.5), dust-rich galaxies with high gas fractions (f_HI = M_HI/(M*+M_HI)>0.5)). Dubbed `Blue and Dusty Gas Rich Sources' (BADGRS) they have cold diffuse dust temperatures, and the highest dust-to-stellar mass ratios of any galaxies in the local Universe. Here, we explore the molecular ISM in a representative sample of BADGRS, using very deep CO(J_up=1,2,3) observations across the central and outer disk regions. We find very low CO brightnesses (Tp=15-30 mK), despite the bright far-infrared emission and metallicities in the range 0.5<Z/Z_sun<1.0. The CO line ratios indicate a range of conditions with R_21=0.6-2.1 and R_31=0.2-1.2. Using a metallicity dependent conversion from CO luminosity to molecular gas mass we find M_H2/M_d=7-27 and Sigma_H2=0.5-6 M_sun…
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