PHANGS-MeerKAT and MHONGOOSE HI observations of nearby spiral galaxies: physical drivers of the molecular gas fraction, $R_{\mathrm{mol}}$
Cosima Eibensteiner, Jiayi Sun, Frank Bigiel, Adam K. Leroy, Eva, Schinnerer, Erik Rosolowsky, Sushma Kurapati, D. J. Pisano, W. J. G de Blok,, Ashley T. Barnes, Mallory Thorp, Dario Colombo, Eric W. Koch, I-Da Chiang,, Eve C. Ostriker, Eric J. Murphy, Nikki Zabel

TL;DR
This study uses high-quality MeerKAT and ALMA observations to analyze the factors influencing the molecular-to-atomic gas ratio in nearby spiral galaxies, highlighting the role of dynamical equilibrium pressure.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed statistical analysis of how local galaxy conditions drive the atomic to molecular gas conversion using new high-resolution HI and CO data.
Findings
$R_{mol}$ correlates strongly with dynamical equilibrium pressure (P$_{DE}$).
Atomic gas dominates beyond 0.4 times the optical radius ($r_{25}$).
Baryon mass is primarily stellar where atomic and molecular gases are balanced.
Abstract
The molecular-to-atomic gas ratio is crucial to the evolution of the interstellar medium in galaxies. We investigate the balance between the atomic () and molecular gas () surface densities in eight nearby star-forming galaxies using new high-quality observations from MeerKAT and ALMA (for HI and CO, respectively). We define the molecular gas ratio as and measure how it depends on local conditions in the galaxy disks using multi-wavelength observations. We find that, depending on the galaxy, HI is detected at out to 20-120 kpc in galactocentric radius (). The typical radius at which reaches 1~ is ~kpc, which corresponds to 1-3 times the optical radius (). correlates best with the dynamical…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpectroscopy and Laser Applications · Scientific Research and Discoveries · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
