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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

The molecular interstellar medium in ultraluminous infrared galaxies

TLDR
In this article, the authors used the IRAM 30 m telescope of CO in a large sample of ultraluminous IR galaxies out to redshift z = 0.3 to derive the sizes of the FIR- and CO-emitting regions and the enclosed dynamical masses.
Abstract
We present observations with the IRAM 30 m telescope of CO in a large sample of ultraluminous IR galaxies out to redshift z = 0.3. Most of the ultraluminous galaxies in this sample are interacting, but not completed, mergers. The CO(1-0) luminosity of all but one of the ultraluminous galaxies is high, with values of log (L${′}{r CO}$ -->/K km s-1 pc2) = 9.92 ? 0.12. The extremely small dispersion of only 30% is less than that of the far-infrared luminosity. The integrated CO line intensity is strongly correlated with the 100 ?m flux density, as expected for a blackbody model in which the mid- and far-IR radiation is optically thick. We use this model to derive sizes of the FIR- and CO-emitting regions and the enclosed dynamical masses. Both the IR and CO emission originate in regions a few hundred parsecs in radius. The median value of LFIR${r FIR}$ -->/L${′}{r CO}$ -->=160 L?/K km s-1 pc2, within a factor of 2 or 3 of the blackbody limit for the observed far-IR temperatures. The entire ISM is a scaled-up version of a normal galactic disk with the ambient densities a factor of 100 higher, making even the intercloud medium a molecular region. We compare three different techniques of H2 mass estimation and conclude that the ratio of gas mass to CO luminosity is about a factor of 4 times lower than for giant molecular clouds (GMCs) but that the gas mass is a large fraction of the dynamical mass. Our analysis of CO emission from ultraluminous galaxies reduces the H2 mass from previous estimates of 2-5 ? 1010 M? to 0.4-1.5 ? 1010 M?, which is in the range found for molecular gas-rich spiral galaxies. A collision involving a molecular gas-rich spiral could lead to an ultraluminous galaxy powered by central starbursts triggered by the compression of infalling preexisting GMCs. The extremely dense molecular gas in the center of an ultraluminous galaxy is an ideal stellar nursery for a huge starburst.

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Citations
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The Global Schmidt law in star forming galaxies

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The CO-to-H2 Conversion Factor

TL;DR: In this article, the authors review the theoretical underpinning, techniques, and results of efforts to estimate the CO-to-H2 conversion factor in different environments, and recommend a conversion factor XCO = 2×10 20 cm −2 (K km s −1 ) −1 with ±30% uncertainty.
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Rotating Nuclear Rings and Extreme Starbursts in Ultraluminous Galaxies

TL;DR: In this paper, a model of radiative transfer through subthermally excited CO in the molecular disks was proposed, which yields gas masses of ~5 × 109 M and a ratio M/L ≈ 0.8 M
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What Powers Ultraluminous IRAS Galaxies

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present an ISO SWS and ISOPHOT-S, mid-infrared spectroscopic survey of 15 ultraluminous IRAS galaxies (LIR ≥ 1012 L ).
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Ultraluminous infrared galaxies and the origin of quasars

TL;DR: In this article, ground-based observations of a complete sample of 10 of these infrared galaxies suggest that they represent the initial dust-enshrouded stages of quasars, and a second group of ultraluminous objects selected on the basis of warm infrared colors are found to be preferentially Seyfert galaxies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mass, luminosity, and line width relations of Galactic molecular clouds

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors presented an analysis of the cloud sizes, velocity line widths, viral masses, and CO luminosities of 273 Galactic molecular clouds which utilizes the higher resolution Massachusetts-Stony Brook Galactic plane CO survey.
Journal ArticleDOI

Warm ultraluminous galaxies in the IRAS survey - The transition from galaxy to quasar?

TL;DR: In this paper, a transition stage between cooler ultraluminous infrared galaxies and optical quasars has been detected in 90 extragalactic objects chosen from the IRAS catalog on the basis of brightness at 60 mum and warm infrared color.
Journal ArticleDOI

Compact starbursts in ultraluminous infrared galaxies

TL;DR: The 40 ultraluminous galaxies in the IRAS Bright Galaxy Sample of sources stronger than S = 5.24 Jy at lambda = 60 microns were mapped with approximately 0.25 arcsec resolution at 8.44 GHz.
Journal ArticleDOI

Molecular gas in luminous infrared galaxies

TL;DR: In this paper, radio observations of 60 bright IRAS galaxies with redshifts of 1500-25,000 km/sec were reported, with a mean ratio of H2 to warm dust of 540 + or - 290, corresponding to a total gas/dust ratio of 900-1100.
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