4.7 Article

Far-infrared spectroscopy of normal galaxies: Physical conditions in the interstellar medium

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 561, Issue 2, Pages 766-786

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1086/323046

Keywords

galaxies : ISM; HII regions; ISM : atoms; ISM : general; ISM : lines and bands; radiation mechanisms : thermal

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The most important cooling lines of the neutral interstellar medium (ISM) lie in the far-infrared (FIR). We present measurements by the Infrared Space Observatory Long Wavelength Spectrometer of seven lines from neutral and ionized ISM of 60 normal, star-forming galaxies. The galaxy sample spans a range in properties such as morphology, FIR colors (indicating dust temperature), and FIR/blue ratios (indicating star formation activity and optical depth). In two-thirds of the galaxies in this sample, the [C II] line flux is proportional to FIR dust continuum. The other one-third show a smooth decline in L-[C II]/L-FIR with increasing F-v(60 mum)/F-v(100 mum) and L-FIR/L-B, spanning a range of a factor of more than 50. Two galaxies at the warm and active extreme of the range have L-[C II]/L-FIR < 2 x 10(-4) (3 upper limit). This is due to increased positive grain charge in the warmer and more active galaxies, which leads to less efficient heating by photoelectrons from dust grains. The ratio of the two principal photodissociation region (PDR) cooling lines L-[O I]/L-[C II] shows a tight correlation with F-v(60 mum)/F-v(100 mum), indicating that both gas and dust temperatures increase together. We derive a theoretical scaling between [N II] (122 mum) and [C II] from ionized gas and use it to separate [C II] emission from neutral PDRs and ionized gas. Comparison of PDR models of Kaufman et al. with observed ratios of (1) L-[O I]/L-[C II] and L-[C II] + L-[O I]/L-FIR and (2) L-[O I]/L-FIR and F-v(60 mum)/F-v(100 mum) yields far-UV flux G(0) and gas density n. The G(0) and n values estimated from the two methods agree to better than a factor of 2 and 1.5, respectively, in more than half the sources. The derived and n correlate with each other, and increases with n as G(0) proportional to n(alpha), where alpha approximate to 1.4. We interpret this correlation as arising from Stromgren sphere scalings if much of the line and continuum luminosity arises near star-forming regions. The high values of PDR surface temperature (270-900 K) and pressure (6 x 10(4)-1.5 x 10(7) K cm(-3)) derived also support the view that a significant part of grain and gas heating in the galaxies occurs very close to star-forming regions. The differences in G(0) and n from galaxy to galaxy may be due to differences in the physical properties of the star-forming clouds. Galaxies with higher G(0) and n have larger and/or denser star-forming clouds.

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