Investigating the relation between CO (3–2) and far-infrared luminosities for nearby merging galaxies using ASTE

We present the new single-dish CO (3–2) emission data obtained toward 19 early-stage and 7 late-stage nearby merging galaxies using the Atacama Submillimeter Telescope Experiment (ASTE). Combining with the single-dish and interferometric data of galaxies observed in previous studies, we investigate...

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Veröffentlicht in:Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japan 2016-09, Vol.68 (6)
Hauptverfasser: Michiyama, Tomonari, Iono, Daisuke, Nakanishi, Kouichiro, Ueda, Junko, Saito, Toshiki, Ando, Misaki, Kaneko, Hiroyuki, Yamashita, Takuji, Matsuda, Yuichi, Hatsukade, Bunyo, Kikuchi, Kenichi, Komugi, Shinya, Muto, Takayuki
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We present the new single-dish CO (3–2) emission data obtained toward 19 early-stage and 7 late-stage nearby merging galaxies using the Atacama Submillimeter Telescope Experiment (ASTE). Combining with the single-dish and interferometric data of galaxies observed in previous studies, we investigate the relation between the CO (3–2) luminosity ($L^{\prime }_{\rm CO(3-2)}$) and the far-infrared luminosity (LFIR) in a sample of 29 early-stage and 31 late-stage merging galaxies, and 28 nearby isolated spiral galaxies. We find that normal isolated spiral galaxies and merging galaxies have different slopes (α) in the $\log L^{\prime }_{\rm CO(3-2)}$–log LFIR plane (α ∼ 0.79 for spirals and ∼1.12 for mergers). The large slope (α > 1) for merging galaxies can be interpreted as evidence for increasing star formation efficiency (SFE = $L_{\rm FIR}/L^{\prime }_{\rm CO(3-2)}$) as a function of LFIR. Comparing our results with sub-kpc-scale local star formation and global starburst activity in the high-z universe, we find deviations from the linear relationship in the $\log L^{\prime }_{\rm CO(3-2)}$–log LFIR plane for the late-stage mergers and high-z star-forming galaxies. Finally, we find that the average SFE gradually increases from isolated galaxies to merging galaxies and to high-z submillimeter galaxies/quasi-stellar objects. By comparing our findings with results from numerical simulations, we suggest that: (1) inefficient starbursts triggered by disk-wide dense clumps occur in the early stage of interaction, and (2) efficient starbursts triggered by central concentration of gas occur in the final stage. A systematic high spatial resolution survey of diffuse- and dense-gas tracers is the key to confirming this scenario.
ISSN:0004-6264
2053-051X
DOI:10.1093/pasj/psw087