A Spitzer Infrared Spectrograph Survey of Warm Molecular Hydrogen in Ultra-luminous Infrared Galaxies

Abstract

We have conducted a survey of Ultra-luminous Infrared Galaxies (ULIRGs) with the Infrared Spectrograph on the Spitzer Space Telescope, obtaining spectra from 5.0-38.5um for 77 sources with 0.02<z <0.93. Observations of the pure rotational H2 lines S(3) 9.67um, S(2) 12.28um, and S(1) 17.04um are used to derive the temperature and mass of the warm molecular gas. We detect H2 in 77% of the sample, and all ULIRGs with F(60um)>2Jy. The average warm molecular gas mass is ~2x108solar-masses. High extinction, inferred from the 9.7um silicate absorption depth, is not observed along the line of site to the molecular gas. The derived H2 mass does not depend on F(25um)/F(60um), which has been used to infer either starburst or AGN dominance. Similarly, the molecular mass does not scale with the 25 or 60um luminosities. In general, the H2 emission is consistent with an origin in photo-dissociation regions associated with star formation. We detect the S(0) 28.22um emission line in a few ULIRGs. Including this line in the model fits tends to lower the temperature by ~50-100K, resulting in a significant increase in the gas mass. The presence of a cooler component cannot be ruled out in the remainder of our sample, for which we do not detect the S(0) line. The measured S(7) 5.51um line fluxes in six ULIRGs implies ~3x106 solar-masses of hot (~1400K) H2. The warm gas mass is typically less than 1% of the cold gas mass derived from CO observations.

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