Gas Content and Kinematics in Clumpy, Turbulent Star-forming Disks

Abstract

We present molecular gas mass estimates for a sample of 13 local galaxies whose kinematic and star forming properties closely resemble those observed in z≈ 1.5 main-sequence galaxies. Plateau de Bure observations of the CO[1-0] emission line and Herschel Space Observatory observations of the dust emission both suggest molecular gas mass fractions of ~20%. Moreover, dust emission modeling finds Tdust<30K, suggesting a cold dust distribution compared to their high infrared luminosity. The gas mass estimates argue that z0.1 DYNAMO galaxies not only share similar kinematic properties with high-z disks, but they are also similarly rich in molecular material. Pairing the gas mass fractions with existing kinematics reveals a linear relationship between fgas and σ/vc, consistent with predictions from stability theory of a self-gravitating disk. It thus follows that high gas velocity dispersions are a natural consequence of large gas fractions. We also find that the systems with lowest depletion times (0.5 Gyr) have the highest ratios of σ/vc and more pronounced clumps, even at the same high molecular gas fraction.

0

Discussion (0)

Sign in to join the discussion.

Loading comments…