An ALCHEMI inspection of sulphur-bearing species towards the central molecular zone of NGC 253
M. Bouvier, S. Viti, E. Behrens, J. Butterworth, K.-Y. Huang, J. G., Mangum, N. Harada, S. Mart\'in, V. M. Rivilla, S. Muller, K. Sakamoto, Y., Yoshimura, K. Tanaka, K. Nakanishi, R. Herrero-Illana, L. Colzi, M. D., Gorski, C. Henkel, P. K. Humire, D. S. Meier

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution ALMA observations to analyze sulphur-bearing molecules in NGC 253's central molecular zone, revealing their emission is mainly linked to shocks and star formation activity.
Contribution
It provides a detailed LTE and non-LTE analysis of sulphur species in NGC 253, clarifying their origins and the physical conditions of their emitting regions.
Findings
Sulphur species trace different gas components: shocks and dense molecular gas.
Most sulphur-bearing emission is dominated by shocks related to star formation.
Uncertain origins for some species like CCS and SO2.
Abstract
Sulphur-bearing species are detected in various environments within Galactic star-forming regions and are particularly abundant in the gas phase of outflows and shocks, and photo-dissociation regions. In this work, we aim to investigate the nature of the emission from the most common sulphur-bearing species observable at millimetre wavelengths towards the nuclear starburst of the galaxy NGC 253. We intend to understand which type of regions are probed by sulphur-bearing species and which process(es) dominate(s) the release of sulphur into the gas phase. We used the high-angular resolution (1.6" or 27 pc) observations from the ALCHEMI ALMA Large Program to image several sulphur-bearing species towards the central molecular zone (CMZ) of NGC 253. We performed local thermodynamic equilibrium (LTE) and non-LTE large velocity gradient (LVG) analyses to derive the physical conditions of the…
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