http://arxiv.org/abs/1810.12315
The $\rm H_2$ mass of molecular clouds has traditionally been traced by the CO(J=1-0) rotational transition line. This said, CO is relatively easily photodissociated, and can also be destroyed by cosmic rays, thus rendering some fraction of molecular gas to be “CO-dark”. We investigate the amount and physical properties of CO-dark gas in two $z \sim 0$ disc galaxies, and develop predictions for the expected intensities of promising alternative tracers ([CI 609 $\mu$m and [CII] 158 $\mu$m emission). We do this by combining cosmological zoom simulations of disc galaxies with thermal-radiative-chemical equilibrium interstellar medium (ISM) calculations to model the predicted H~\textsc{i} and $\rm H_2$ abundances and CO(J=1-0), [CI] 609 $\mu$m and [CII] 158 $\mu$m emission properties. Our model treats the ISM as a collection of radially stratified clouds whose properties are dictated by their volume and column densities, the gas-phase metallicity, and the interstellar radiation field and cosmic ray ionization rates. Our main results follow. Adopting an observationally motivated definition of CO-dark gas, i.e. $\rm H_2$ gas with $W_{\rm CO} < 0.1 $ K-km/s, we find that a significant amount ($> 50\%$) of the total $\rm H_2$ mass lies in CO-dark gas, most of which is diffuse gas, poorly shielded due to low dust column density. The CO-dark molecular gas tends to be dominated by [CII], though [CI] also serves as a bright tracer of the dark gas in many instances. At the same time, [CII] also tends to trace neutral atomic gas. As a result, when we quantify the conversion factors for the three carbon-based tracers of molecular gas, we find that [CI] suffers the least contamination from diffuse atomic gas, and is relatively insensitive to secondary parameters.
Q. Li, D. Narayanan, R. Dave, et. al.
Wed, 31 Oct 18
60/65
Comments: Accepted for publication in ApJ. 13 pages plus appendices
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