CO-CHANGES II: spatially resolved IRAM 30M CO line observations of 23 nearby edge-on spiral galaxies
Yan Jiang (1, 2), Jiang-Tao Li (1), Qing-Hua Tan (1), Li Ji (1 and, 3), Joel N. Bregman (4), Q. Daniel Wang (5), Jian-Fa Wang (1, 2), Li-Yuan, Lu (6, 1), and Xue-Jian Jiang (7) ((1) Purple Mountain Observatory,, Chinese Academy of Sciences, 10 Yuanhua Road, Nanjing 210023, China

TL;DR
This study uses spatially resolved IRAM 30m CO line observations of 23 nearby edge-on spiral galaxies to analyze molecular and atomic gas distributions, their relation to star formation, and scaling laws like the Kennicutt-Schmidt law.
Contribution
It provides new detailed measurements of molecular gas properties and their relation to atomic gas and galaxy dynamics in a sample of edge-on spirals, including physical parameters derived from multiple CO lines.
Findings
Most galaxies follow the spatially resolved star formation law with a median depletion time of ~1 Gyr.
The molecular-to-atomic gas mass ratio correlates strongly with stellar mass.
Galaxies with lower stellar masses have more atomic gas, indicating less efficient molecular gas formation.
Abstract
Molecular gas, as the fuel for star formation, and its relationship with atomic gas are crucial for understanding how galaxies regulate their star forming (SF) activities. We conducted IRAM 30m observations of 23 nearby spiral galaxies from the CHANG-ES project to investigatet the distribution of molecular gas and the Kennicutt-Schmidt law. Combining these results with atomic gas masses from previous studies, we aim to investigate the scaling relations that connect the molecular and atomic gas masses with stellar masses and the baryonic Tully-Fisher relation. Based on spatially resolved observations of the three CO lines, we calculated the total molecular gas masses, the ratios between different CO lines, and derived physical parameters such as temperature and optical depth. The median line ratios for nuclear/disk regions are 8.6/6.1 (^{12}\mathrm{CO}/^{13}\mathrm{CO}\ J=1{-}0) and…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena
