ALMA Resolves Giant Molecular Clouds in a Tidal Dwarf Galaxy
M. Querejeta, F. Lelli, E. Schinnerer, D. Colombo, U. Lisenfeld, C. G., Mundell, F. Bigiel, S. Garc\'ia-Burillo, C. N. Herrera, A. Hughes, J. M. D., Kruijssen, S. E. Meidt, T. J. T. Moore, J. Pety, A. J. Rigby

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution ALMA observations to resolve and analyze giant molecular clouds in a tidal dwarf galaxy, revealing their properties, distribution, and star formation activity, which differ from typical galaxies but show universal small-scale star formation processes.
Contribution
First detailed ALMA study resolving GMCs in a tidal dwarf galaxy, comparing their properties with those in other galaxies, and examining star formation and ISM organization.
Findings
GMCs follow Milky Way size-mass relation but have higher velocity dispersions.
High molecular-to-atomic gas ratio (~1) varies across the galaxy.
Star formation occurs mainly in the south with offsets between GMCs and young stars.
Abstract
Tidal dwarf galaxies (TDGs) are gravitationally bound condensations of gas and stars formed during galaxy interactions. Here we present multi-configuration ALMA observations of J1023+1952, a TDG in the interacting system Arp 94, where we resolve CO(2-1) emission down to giant molecular clouds (GMCs) at 0.64" ~ 45pc resolution. We find a remarkably high fraction of extended molecular emission (~80-90%), which is filtered out by the interferometer and likely traces diffuse gas. We detect 111 GMCs that give a similar mass spectrum as those in the Milky Way and other nearby galaxies (a truncated power law with slope of -1.76+/-0.13). We also study Larson's laws over the available dynamic range of GMC properties (~2 dex in mass and ~1 dex in size): GMCs follow the size-mass relation of the Milky Way, but their velocity dispersion is higher such that the size-linewidth and virial relations…
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