Radiative and mechanical energies in galaxies I. Contributions of molecular shocks and PDRs in 3C 326 N
J. A. Villa-V\'elez, B. Godard, P. Guillard, G. Pineau des For\^ets

TL;DR
This paper develops a new framework to interpret atomic and molecular lines in galaxies, revealing the contributions of shocks and PDRs to the energy budget in the galaxy 3C 326 N, and demonstrating the method's potential with JWST data.
Contribution
It introduces a novel approach combining shock and PDR models to derive galaxy energy budgets solely from line observations, emphasizing the role of diffuse interstellar medium.
Findings
Both shocks and PDRs are needed to explain line fluxes in 3C 326 N.
Emission mainly from diffuse interstellar matter at low densities.
Reprocessed energies match infrared luminosity and jet power estimates.
Abstract
Context: Atomic and molecular lines in galaxies offer insights into energy budgets and feedback mechanisms. Aims: This study establishes a new framework for interpreting these lines and deducing energy budgets from observations. Methods: Atomic and molecular lines detected in a given object are assumed to result from the combination of distributions of shocks and photo-dissociation regions (PDR). Using the Paris-Durham shock code and the Meudon PDR code, emissions are computed over a wide range of parameters. Total emissions are calculated using probability distribution functions, with a defined distance metric based on observed and predicted intensity ratios. Results: We analyze the radio galaxy 3C 326 N, finding both shocks and PDRs necessary to explain the line fluxes. Viable solutions occur only at low densities (), indicating emission from diffuse…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
