WISDOM Project -- IX Giant Molecular Clouds in the Lenticular Galaxy NGC4429: Effects of Shear and Tidal Forces on Clouds
Lijie Liu, Martin Bureau, Leo Blitz, Timothy A. Davis, Kyoko Onishi,, Mark Smith, Eve North, Satoru Iguchi

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution ALMA observations to analyze giant molecular clouds in NGC4429, revealing the significant influence of external gravitational forces like shear and tides on cloud stability and dynamics.
Contribution
It introduces a modified Virial theorem incorporating external gravity, demonstrating that external forces are crucial in cloud stability analysis in NGC4429.
Findings
Clouds have higher surface densities and linewidths than Milky Way clouds.
Most clouds are marginally gravitationally bound, with external gravity playing a key role.
Cloud sizes are comparable to their tidal radii and are elongated radially.
Abstract
We present high spatial resolution (12pc) Atacama Large Millimeter/sub-millimeter Array CO(J=3-2) observations of the nearby lenticular galaxy NGC4429. We identify 217 giant molecular clouds within the 450pc radius molecular gas disc. The clouds generally have smaller sizes and masses but higher surface densities and observed linewidths than those of Milky Way disc clouds. An unusually steep size - line width relation and large cloud internal velocity gradients (0.05 - 0.91 km s^-1 pc^-1) and observed Virial parameters (alpha_obs,vir = 4.0) are found, that appear due to internal rotation driven by the background galactic gravitational potential. Removing this rotation, an internal Virial equilibrium appears to be established between the self-gravitational (Usg) and turbulent kinetic (Eturb) energies of each cloud, i.e. alpha_sg,vir=Usg/Eturb = 1.3. However, to properly account for both…
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