Leroy, Adam K. and Sandstrom, Karin and Rosolowsky, Erik and Belfiore, Francesco and Bolatto, Alberto D. and Cao, Yixian and Koch, Eric W. and Schinnerer, Eva and Barnes, Ashley. T. and Bešlić, Ivana and Bigiel, F. and Blanc, Guillermo A. and Chastenet, Jérémy and Chen, Ness Mayker and Chevance, Mélanie and Chown, Ryan and Congiu, Enrico and Dale, Daniel A. and Egorov, Oleg V. and Emsellem, Eric and Eibensteiner, Cosima and Faesi, Christopher M. and Glover, Simon C. O. and Grasha, Kathryn and Groves, Brent and Hassani, Hamid and Henshaw, Jonathan D. and Hughes, Annie and Jiménez-Donaire, María J. and Kim, Jaeyeon and Klessen, Ralf S. and Kreckel, Kathryn and Kruijssen, J. M. Diederik and Larson, Kirsten L. and Lee, Janice C. and Levy, Rebecca C. and Liu, Daizhong and Lopez, Laura A. and Meidt, Sharon E. and Murphy, Eric J. and Neumann, Justus and Pessa, Ismael and Pety, Jérôme and Saito, Toshiki and Sardone, Amy and Sun, Jiayi and Thilker, David A. and Usero, Antonio and Watkins, Elizabeth J. and Whitcomb, Cory M. and Williams, Thomas G. (2023) PHANGS–JWST First Results: Mid-infrared Emission Traces Both Gas Column Density and Heating at 100 pc Scales. The Astrophysical Journal Letters, 944 (2). L9. ISSN 2041-8205
2.pdf - Published Version
Download (8MB)
Abstract
We compare mid-infrared (mid-IR), extinction-corrected Hα, and CO (2–1) emission at 70–160 pc resolution in the first four PHANGS–JWST targets. We report correlation strengths, intensity ratios, and power-law fits relating emission in JWST's F770W, F1000W, F1130W, and F2100W bands to CO and Hα. At these scales, CO and Hα each correlate strongly with mid-IR emission, and these correlations are each stronger than the one relating CO to Hα emission. This reflects that mid-IR emission simultaneously acts as a dust column density tracer, leading to a good match with the molecular-gas-tracing CO, and as a heating tracer, leading to a good match with the Hα. By combining mid-IR, CO, and Hα at scales where the overall correlation between cold gas and star formation begins to break down, we are able to separate these two effects. We model the mid-IR above Iν = 0.5 MJy sr−1 at F770W, a cut designed to select regions where the molecular gas dominates the interstellar medium (ISM) mass. This bright emission can be described to first order by a model that combines a CO-tracing component and an Hα-tracing component. The best-fitting models imply that ∼50% of the mid-IR flux arises from molecular gas heated by the diffuse interstellar radiation field, with the remaining ∼50% associated with bright, dusty star-forming regions. We discuss differences between the F770W, F1000W, and F1130W bands and the continuum-dominated F2100W band and suggest next steps for using the mid-IR as an ISM tracer.
Item Type: | Article |
---|---|
Subjects: | East India library > Physics and Astronomy |
Depositing User: | Unnamed user with email support@eastindialibrary.com |
Date Deposited: | 17 Apr 2023 06:24 |
Last Modified: | 23 Sep 2024 04:38 |
URI: | http://info.paperdigitallibrary.com/id/eprint/812 |