Modeling the molecular gas content and CO-to-H2 conversion factors in low-metallicity star-forming dwarf galaxies
L. Ramambason, V. Lebouteiller, S. C. Madden, F. Galliano, C. T., Richardson, A. Saintonge, I. De Looze, M. Chevance, N. P. Abel, S. Hernandez,, J. Braine

TL;DR
This study models the molecular gas in low-metallicity dwarf galaxies, revealing a predominantly CO-dark H2 reservoir and highlighting the importance of gas clumpiness in interpreting CO observations.
Contribution
It introduces complex, physically-motivated models of the interstellar medium, demonstrating the impact of gas structure on CO-to-H2 conversion factors in low-metallicity environments.
Findings
CO-dark molecular gas dominates in low-metallicity galaxies.
[C II]158um and [CI] 609um are better tracers of H2 mass than CO.
Clumpiness of gas influences the CO-to-H2 conversion factor.
Abstract
Low-metallicity dwarf galaxies often show no or little CO emission, despite the intense star formation observed in local samples. Both simulations and resolved observations indicate that molecular gas in low-metallicity galaxies may reside in small dense clumps, surrounded by a substantial amount of more diffuse gas, not traced by CO. Constraining the relative importance of CO-bright versus CO-dark H2 star-forming reservoirs is crucial to understand how star formation proceeds at low metallicity. We put to the test classically used single component radiative transfer models and compare their results to those obtained assuming an increasingly complex structure of the interstellar gas, mimicking an inhomogeneous distribution of clouds with various physical properties. We compute representative models of the interstellar medium as combinations of several gas components, each with a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Atmospheric Ozone and Climate · Spectroscopy and Laser Applications
