Investigating the chemical link between H$_2$CO and CH$_3$OH within the CMZ of NGC 253
K.-Y. Huang, E. Behrens, M. Bouvier, S. Viti, J. G. Mangum, C. Eibensteiner

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution imaging to explore the distinct physical and chemical environments of formaldehyde and methanol in NGC 253's starburst core, revealing their formation processes and environmental dependencies.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the different physical conditions and formation mechanisms of H$_2$CO and CH$_3$OH in a starburst galaxy, challenging previous assumptions of their chemical link.
Findings
H$_2$CO traces low density, high temperature regions.
CH$_3$OH traces high density, low temperature regions.
CH$_3$OH abundance shows a radial gradient in the CMZ.
Abstract
Formaldehyde (HCO) and methanol (CHOH) have served as traditional tracers of the star formation process for decades. Studies of the environments which produce these species, though, have pointed to significant differences in the physical environments within which each molecule resides. In this paper we investigate the physical and chemical conditions which give rise to formaldehyde and methanol emission in the nearby starburst galaxy NGC 253. We employ high spatial (1.6 or pc) and spectral ( km/s) imaging of the NGC 253 central molecular zone (CMZ) from the ALCHEMI Large Program to constrain radiative transfer models of the dense gas volume density, and temperature, molecular species column density, and source filling factor within eight giant molecular clouds (GMCs). We also measure the relative abundances of the two nuclear spin isomers of CHOH to…
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