New Constraints on the $^{12}$CO(2-1)/(1-0) Line Ratio Across Nearby Disc Galaxies
J. S. den Brok, D. Chatzigiannakis, F. Bigiel, J. Puschnig, A. T., Barnes, A. K. Leroy, M. J. Jim\'enez-Donaire, A. Usero, E. Schinnerer, E., Rosolowsky, C. M. Faesi, K. Grasha, A. Hughes, J. M. D. Kruijssen, D. Liu, L., Neumann, J. Pety, M. Querejeta, T. Saito, A. Schruba

TL;DR
This study measures the CO(2-1)/CO(1-0) line ratio across nine nearby spiral galaxies, finding an average ratio of 0.64 with weak radial variation, which helps improve molecular gas mass estimates in galaxy studies.
Contribution
It provides new high-resolution measurements of the CO line ratio across galaxy disks, refining the understanding of its average value and spatial variations in star-forming galaxies.
Findings
Average $R_{21}$ ratio is 0.64 with weak radial variation.
Central regions show a 10-20% enhancement in $R_{21}.
$R_{21}$ correlates with gas density and star formation indicators.
Abstract
Both the CO(2-1) and CO(1-0) lines are used to trace the mass of molecular gas in galaxies. Translating the molecular gas mass estimates between studies using different lines requires a good understanding of the behaviour of the CO(2-1)-to-CO(1-0) ratio, . We compare new, high quality CO(1-0) data from the IRAM 30-m EMPIRE survey to the latest available CO(2-1) maps from HERACLES, PHANGS-ALMA, and a new IRAM 30-m M51 Large Program. This allows us to measure across the full star-forming disc of nine nearby, massive, star-forming spiral galaxies at 27" ( kpc) resolution. We find an average when we take the luminosity-weighted mean of all individual galaxies. This result is consistent with the mean ratio for disc galaxies that we derive from single-pointing measurements in the literature, . The…
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