36 GHz methanol lines from nearby galaxies: maser or quasi-thermal emission?
P. Humire, C. Henkel, Y. Gong, S. Leurini, R. Mauersberger, S.A., Levshakov, B. Winkel, A. Tarchi, P. Castangia, A. Malawi, H. Asiri, S.P., Ellingsen, T.P. McCarthy, X. Chen, X. Tang

TL;DR
This study reports the detection of 36 GHz methanol emission in nearby galaxies Maffei2 and IC342, exploring whether these are maser or quasi-thermal emissions, and compares these findings with other galaxies and previous reports.
Contribution
First detection of 36 GHz methanol emission in Maffei2 and IC342, providing insights into extragalactic methanol masers and their relation to galaxy features.
Findings
Maffei2's 36 GHz methanol line is the second most luminous outside the Local Group.
No confirmation of 36 GHz maser emission in Arp220.
Non-detections of 44 GHz line suggest it is not stronger than the 36 GHz line.
Abstract
Methanol (CH3OH) is one of the most abundant interstellar molecules, offering a vast number of transitions to be studied, including many maser lines. While the strongest Galactic CH3OH lines, the so-called class II masers, show no indications for the presence of superluminous counterparts in external galaxies, the less luminous Galactic class I sources appear to be different. Here we report class I 36GHz CH3OH 4(-1) - 3(0) E line emission from the nearby galaxies Maffei2 and IC342, measured with the 100-m telescope at Effelsberg at three different epochs within a time span of about five weeks. The 36GHz methanol line of Maffei2 is the second most luminous among the sources detected with certainty outside the Local Group of galaxies. This is not matched by the moderate infrared luminosity of Maffei2. Higher resolution data are required to check whether this is related to its prominent…
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