Cold Molecular Gas in Merger Remnants. II. The properties of dense molecular gas
Junko Ueda, Daisuke Iono, Min S. Yun, Tomonari Michiyama, Yoshimasa, Watanabe, Ronald L. Snell, Daniel Rosa-Gonzalez, Toshiki Saito, Olga Vega,, and Takuji Yamashita

TL;DR
This study investigates dense molecular gas properties in 28 local galaxy merger remnants using 3 mm spectra, revealing elevated dense gas tracers and star formation efficiency that persist after merger completion.
Contribution
It provides new observational data on dense molecular gas in merger remnants and shows that star formation efficiency remains high post-merger, highlighting the impact of merging on star formation modes.
Findings
Higher dense gas line ratios in U/LIRGs compared to non-LIRGs.
No correlation between IR/HCN ratio and IR luminosity.
Enhanced star formation efficiency persists after merger coalescence.
Abstract
We present the 3 mm wavelength spectra of 28 local galaxy merger remnants obtained with the Large Millimeter Telescope. Fifteen molecular lines from 13 different molecular species and isotopologues were identified, and 21 out of 28 sources were detected in one or more molecular lines. On average, the line ratios of the dense gas tracers, such as HCN (1-0) and HCO(1-0), to CO (1-0) are 3-4 times higher in ultra/luminous infrared galaxies (U/LIRGs) than in non-LIRGs in our sample. These high line ratios could be explained by the deficiency of CO and high dense gas fractions suggested by high HCN (1-0)/CO (1-0) ratios. We calculate the IR-to-HCN (1-0) luminosity ratio as a proxy of the dense gas star formation efficiency. There is no correlation between the IR/HCN ratio and the IR luminosity, while the IR/HCN ratio varies from source to source (1.1-6.5) $\times…
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