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Science with an ngVLA: Molecular Clouds in Galaxies

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 Added by Adam Leroy
 Publication date 2018
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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Stars form in cold clouds of predominantly molecular (H2) gas. We are just beginning to understand how the formation, properties, and destruction of these clouds varies across the universe. In this chapter, we describe how the thermal line imaging capabilities of the proposed next generation Very Large Array (ngVLA) could make major contributions to this field. Looking at CO emission, the proposed ngVLA would be able to quickly survey the bulk properties of molecular clouds across the whole nearby galaxy population. This includes many unique very nearby northern targets (e.g., Andromeda) inaccessible to ALMA. Such surveys offer a main observational constraint on the formation, destruction, lifetime, and star formation properties of clouds. Targeting specific regions, the ngVLA will also be able to heavily resolve clouds in the nearest galaxies. This will allow detailed studies of the substructure and kinematics --- and so the internal physics --- of clouds across different chemical and dynamical environments.



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118 - R. Decarli , C. Carilli , C. Casey 2018
The goal of this science case is to accurately pin down the molecular gas content of high redshift galaxies. By targeting the CO ground transition, we circumvent uncertainties related to CO excitation. The ngVLA can observe the CO(1-0) line at virtually any $z>1.5$, thus exposing the evolution of gaseous reservoirs from the earliest epochs down to the peak of the cosmic history of star formation. The order-of-magnitude improvement in the number of CO detections with respect to state-of-the-art observational campaigns will provide a unique insight on the evolution of galaxies through cosmic time.
Planets assemble in the midplanes of protoplanetary disks. The compositions of dust and gas in the disk midplane region determine the compositions of nascent planets, including their chemical hospitality to life. In this context, the distributions of volatile organic material across the planet and comet forming zones is of special interest. These are difficult to access in the disk midplane at IR and even millimeter wavelengths due to dust opacity, which can veil the midplane, low intrinsic molecular abundances due to efficient freeze-out, and, in the case of mid-sized organics, a mismatch between expected excitation temperatures and accessible line upper energy levels. At ngVLA wavelengths, the dust is optically thin, enabling observations into the planet forming disk midplane. ngVLA also has the requisite sensitivity. Using TW Hya as a case study, we show that ngVLA will be able to map out the distributions of diagnostic organics, such as CH3CN, in nearby protoplanetary disks.
Extraterrestrial amino acids, the chemical building blocks of the biopolymers that comprise life as we know it on Earth are present in meteoritic samples. More recently, glycine (NH$_2$CH$_2$COOH), the simplest amino acid, was detected by the Rosetta mission in comet 67P. Despite these exciting discoveries, our understanding of the chemical and physical pathways to the formation of (pre)biotic molecules is woefully incomplete. This is largely because our knowledge of chemical inventories during the different stages of star and planet formation is incomplete. It is therefore imperative to solidify our accounting of the chemical inventories, especially of critical yet low-abundance species, in key regions and to use this knowledge to inform, expand, and constrain chemical models of these reactions. This is followed naturally by a requirement to understand the spatial distribution and temporal evolution of this inventory. Here, we briefly outline a handful of particularly-impactful use cases in which the ngVLA will drive the field forward.
Most massive galaxies are now thought to go through an Active Galactic Nucleus (AGN) phase one or more times. Yet, the cause of triggering and the variations in the intrinsic and observed properties of AGN population are still poorly understood. Young, compact radio sources associated with accreting supermassive black holes (SMBHs) represent an important phase in the life cycles of jetted AGN for understanding AGN triggering and duty cycles. The superb sensitivity and resolution of the ngVLA, coupled with its broad frequency coverage, will provide exciting new insights into our understanding of the life cycles of radio AGN and their impact on galaxy evolution. The high spatial resolution of the ngVLA will enable resolved mapping of young radio AGN on sub-kiloparsec scales over a wide range of redshifts. With broad continuum coverage from 1 to 116 GHz, the ngVLA will excel at estimating ages of sources as old as $30-40$ Myr at $z sim 1$. In combination with lower-frequency ($ u < 1$ GHz) instruments such as ngLOBO and the Square Kilometer Array, the ngVLA will robustly characterize the spectral energy distributions of young radio AGN.
The next generation Very Large Array (ngVLA) will revolutionize our understanding of the distant Universe via the detection of cold molecular gas in the first galaxies. Its impact on studies of galaxy characterization via detailed gas dynamics will provide crucial insight on dominant physical drivers for star-formation in high redshift galaxies, including the exchange of gas from scales of the circumgalactic medium down to resolved clouds on mass scales of $sim10^{5},M_odot$. In this study, we employ a series of high-resolution, cosmological, hydrodynamic zoom simulations from the MUFASA simulation suite and a CASA simulator to generate mock ngVLA observations of a $zsim4.5$ gas rich star-forming galaxy. Using the DESPOTIC radiative transfer code that encompasses simultaneous thermal, chemical, and statistical equilibrium in calculating the molecular and atomic level transitions of CO from ALMA for comparison. We find that observations of CO(1-0) are especially important for tracing the systemic redshift of the galaxy and the total mass of the well-shielded molecular gas reservoir, while even CO(2-1) can predominantly trace denser gas regions distinct from CO(1-0). The factor of 100 times improvement in mapping speed for the ngVLA beyond the Jansky VLA and the proposed ALMA Band 1 will make these detailed, high-resolution imaging and kinematic studies of CO(1-0) routine at $zsim2-5$.
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