The correlation between WISE 12 $μ$m emission and molecular gas tracers on sub-kpc scales in nearby star-forming galaxies [GA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/2210.01982


We complement the MALATANG sample of dense gas in nearby galaxies with archival observations of $^{12}\rm CO$ and its isotopologues to determine scaling relations between Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) 12 $\mu$m emission and molecular gas tracers at sub-kiloparsec scales. We find that 12 $\mu$m luminosity is more tightly correlated with $^{12}\rm CO$ than it is with $^{13}\rm CO$ or dense gas tracers. Residuals between predicted and observed $^{12}\rm CO$ are only weakly correlated with molecular gas mass surface density ($\Sigma_{\rm mol}$) in regions where $\Sigma_{\rm mol}$ is very low ($\sim 10~{\rm M_{\odot}~pc^{-2}}$). Above this limit, the $^{12}\rm CO$ residuals show no correlations with physical conditions of molecular gas, while $^{13}\rm CO$ residuals depend on the gas optical depth and temperature. By analyzing differences from galaxy to galaxy, we confirm that the $^{12}\rm CO$-12 $\mu$m relation is strong and statistically robust with respect to star forming galaxies and AGN hosts. These results suggest that WISE 12 $\mu$m emission can be used to trace total molecular gas instead of dense molecular gas, likely because polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs, a major contributor to WISE 12 $\mu$m~emission) may be well-mixed with the gas that is traced by $^{12}\rm CO$. We propose that WISE 12 $\mu$m luminosity can be used to estimate molecular gas surface density for statistical analyses of the star formation process in galaxies.

Read this paper on arXiv…

Y. Gao, Q. Tan, Y. Gao, et. al.
Thu, 6 Oct 22
48/77

Comments: 16 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ