Diagnosing the interstellar medium of galaxies with far-infrared emission lines I. The [C II] 158 microns line at z~0
Andr\'es Felipe Ramos Padilla, Lingyu Wang, Sylvia Ploeckinger, F. F., S. van der Tak, Scott Trager

TL;DR
This paper develops a simulation framework combining cosmological hydrodynamics and ISM models to study [C II] 158 micron emission in galaxies, validating it against local universe observations and exploring ISM phase contributions.
Contribution
It introduces a physically motivated model integrating EAGLE simulations with a multi-phase ISM to predict [C II] emission, accounting for phase contributions and metallicity effects.
Findings
The model agrees with observed [C II]-SFR relation within 0.4 dex.
Neutral gas dominates [C II] emission at moderate SFRs, ionised phase at lower SFRs.
Metallicity influences the [C II] emission ratios, especially in the neutral phase.
Abstract
Atomic fine structure lines have been detected in the local Universe and at high redshifts over the past decades. The [C II] emission line at 158 m is an important observable as it provides constraints on the interstellar medium (ISM) cooling processes. We develop a physically motivated framework to simulate the production of far-infrared line emission from galaxies in a cosmological context. This first paper sets out our methodology and describes its first application, simulating the [C II] 158 m line emission in the local Universe. We combine the output from EAGLE cosmological hydrodynamical simulations with a multi-phase model of the ISM. Gas particles are divided into three phases: dense molecular gas, neutral atomic gas and diffuse ionised gas (DIG). We estimate the [C II] line emission from the three phases using a set of Cloudy cooling tables. Our results agree with…
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