Tracing the total molecular gas in galaxies: [CII] and the CO-dark gas
S. C. Madden, D. Cormier, S. Hony, V. Lebouteiller, N. Abel, M., Galametz, I. De Looze, M. Chevance, F. L. Polles, M.-Y. Lee, F. Galliano, A., Lambert-Huyghe, D. Hu, and L. Ramambason

TL;DR
This paper develops a method using [CII] emission to accurately estimate the total molecular hydrogen in galaxies, especially where CO detection is challenging, revealing a significant amount of CO-dark gas.
Contribution
It introduces a new approach to quantify total H2 mass in galaxies by combining [CII] and CO observations, accounting for CO-dark gas, and provides practical recipes for these estimates.
Findings
70-100% of H2 in dwarf galaxies is CO-dark but traced by [CII]
A new conversion factor relates [CII] luminosity to total H2 mass
Including CO-dark gas aligns dwarf galaxies with the Schmidt-Kennicutt relation.
Abstract
While the CO(1-0) transition is often used to deduce the total molecular hydrogen in galaxies, it is challenging to detect in low metallicity galaxies, in spite of the star formation taking place. In contrast, the [CII] 158 micron line is relatively bright, highlighting a potentially important reservoir of H2 that is not traced by CO(1-0), but residing in the C+ - emitting regions. We explore a method to quantify the total H2 mass (MH2) in galaxies and learn what parameters control the CO-dark gas reservoir. We present Cloudy grids of density, radiation field and metallicity in terms of observed quantities, such as [OI], [CI], CO(1-0), [CII], total infrared luminosity and the total MH2 and provide recipes based on these models to derive total MH2 mass estimates from observations. The models are applied to the Herschel Dwarf Galaxy Survey, extracting the total MH2 for each galaxy which…
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