Extended dust emission and atomic hydrogen, a reservoir of diffuse H2 in NGC 1068

Abstract

We report on sensitive sub-mm imaging observations of the prototype Seyfert~2/starburst galaxy NGC 1068 at 850 μ m and 450 μ m using the Submillimetre Common-User Bolometer Array (SCUBA) on the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT). We find clear evidence of dust emission associated with the extended HI component which together with the very faint 12CO J=1--0 emission give a gas-to-dust ratio of M gas/M dust 70-150. This contrasts with the larger ratio M gas/M dust 330 estimated within a galactocentric radius of r≤ 1.36 kpc, where the gas is mostly molecular and starburst activity occurs. The large gas-to-dust ratio found for the starburst region is attributed to a systematic overestimate of the molecular gas mass in starburst environments when the luminosity of the 12CO J=1--0 line and a standard galactic conversion factor is used. On the other hand sub-mm imaging proves to be a more powerful tool than conventional CO imaging for revealing the properties of the diffuse H2 that coexists with HI. This molecular gas phase is characterized by low densities ( n(H2)<103 cm -3), very faint emission from sub-thermally excited CO, and contains more mass than HI, namely M(H2)/M(HI) 5.

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