No Arabic abstract
Photometric surveys have provided incredible amounts of astronomical information in the form of images. However, astronomical images often contain artifacts that can critically hinder scientific analysis by misrepresenting intensities or contaminating catalogs as artificial objects. These affected pixels need to be masked and dealt with in any data reduction pipeline. In this paper, we present a flexible, iterative algorithm to recover (unmask) astronomical images where some pixels are lacking. We demonstrate the application of the method on some intensity calibration source images in CO Multi-line Imaging of Nearby Galaxies (COMING) Project conducted using the 45m telescope at Nobeyama Radio Observatory (NRO). The proposed algorithm restored artifacts due to a detector error in the intensity calibration source images. The restored images were used to calibrate 11 out of 147 observed galaxy maps in the survey. The tests show that the algorithm can restore measured intensities at sub 1% error even for noisy images (SNR = 2.4), despite lacking a significant part of the image. We present the formulation of the reconstruction algorithm, discuss its possibilities and limitations for extensions to other astronomical signals and the results of the COMING application.
Observations of the molecular gas in galaxies are vital to understanding the evolution and star-forming histories of galaxies. However, galaxies with molecular gas maps of their whole discs having sufficient resolution to distinguish galactic structures are severely lacking. Millimeter wavelength studies at a high angular resolution across multiple lines and transitions are particularly needed, severely limiting our ability to infer the universal properties of molecular gas in galaxies. Hence, we conducted a legacy project with the 45 m telescope of the Nobeyama Radio Observatory, called the CO Multi-line Imaging of Nearby Galaxies (COMING), which simultaneously observed 147 galaxies with high far-infrared flux in $^{12}$CO, $^{13}$CO, and C$^{18}$O $J=1-0$ lines. The total molecular gas mass was derived using the standard CO-to-H$_2$ conversion factor and found to be positively correlated with the total stellar mass derived from the WISE $3.4 mu$m band data. The fraction of the total molecular gas mass to the total stellar mass in galaxies does not depend on their Hubble types nor the existence of a galactic bar, although when galaxies in individual morphological types are investigated separately, the fraction seems to decrease with the total stellar mass in early-type galaxies and vice versa in late-type galaxies. No differences in the distribution of the total molecular gas mass, stellar mass, and the total molecular gas to stellar mass ratio was observed between barred and non-barred galaxies, which is likely the result of our sample selection criteria, in that we prioritized observing FIR bright (and thus molecular gas-rich) galaxies.
We examined radial variations in molecular-gas based star formation efficiency (SFE), which is defined as star formation rate per unit molecular gas mass, for 80 galaxies selected from the CO Multi-line Imaging of Nearby Galaxies project (Sorai et al. 2019). The radial variations in SFE for individual galaxies are typically a factor of 2 -- 3, which suggests that SFE is nearly constant along galactocentric radius. We found the averaged SFE in 80 galaxies of $(1.69 pm 1.1) times 10^{-9}$ yr$^{-1}$, which is consistent with Leroy et al. 2008 if we consider the contribution of helium to the molecular gas mass evaluation and the difference in the assumed initial mass function between two studies. We compared SFE among different morphological (i.e., SA, SAB, and SB) types, and found that SFE within the inner radii ($r/r_{25} < 0.3$, where $r_{25}$ is $B$-band isophotal radius at 25 mag arcsec$^{-2}$) of SB galaxies is slightly higher than that of SA and SAB galaxies. This trend can be partly explained by the dependence of SFE on global stellar mass, which probably relates to the CO-to-H$_2$ conversion factor through the metallicity. For two representative SB galaxies in our sample, NGC 3367 and NGC 7479, the ellipse of $r/r_{25}$ = 0.3 seems to cover not only the central region but also the inner part of the disk, mainly the bar. These two galaxies show higher SFE in the bar than in spiral arms. However, we found an opposite trend in NGC 4303; SFE is lower in the bar than in spiral arms, which is consistent with earlier studies (e.g., Momose et al. 2010). These results suggest diversity of star formation activities in the bar.
While molecular gas mass is usually derived from $^{12}$CO($J$=1-0) - the most fundamental line to explore molecular gas - it is often derived from $^{12}$CO($J$=2-1) assuming a constant $^{12}$CO($J$=2-1)/$^{12}$CO($J$=1-0) line ratio ($R_{2/1}$). We present variations of $R_{2/1}$ and effects of the assumption that $R_{2/1}$ is a constant in 24 nearby galaxies using $^{12}$CO data obtained with the Nobeyama 45-m radio telescope and IRAM 30-m telescope. The median of $R_{2/1}$ for all galaxies is 0.61, and the weighted mean of $R_{2/1}$ by $^{12}$CO($J$=1-0) integrated-intensity is 0.66 with a standard deviation of 0.19. The radial variation of $R_{2/1}$ shows that it is high (~0.8) in the inner ~1 kpc while its median in disks is nearly constant at 0.60 when all galaxies are compiled. In the case that the constant $R_{2/1}$ of 0.7 is adopted, we found that the total molecular gas mass derived from $^{12}$CO($J$=2-1) is underestimated/overestimated by ~20%, and at most by 35%. The scatter of a molecular gas surface density within each galaxy becomes larger by ~30%, and at most by 120%. Indices of the spatially resolved Kennicutt-Schmidt relation by $^{12}$CO($J$=2-1) are underestimated by 10-20%, at most 39% in 17 out of 24 galaxies. $R_{2/1}$ has good positive correlations with star-formation rate and infrared color, and a negative correlation with molecular gas depletion time. There is a clear tendency of increasing $R_{2/1}$ with increasing kinetic temperature ($T_{rm kin}$). Further, we found that not only $T_{rm kin}$ but also pressure of molecular gas is important to understand variations of $R_{2/1}$. Special considerations should be made when discussing molecular gas mass and molecular gas properties inferred from $^{12}$CO($J$=2-1) instead of $^{12}$CO($J$=1-0).
The $^{12}$CO $(J=1rightarrow0)$ velocity fields of a sample of 20 nearby spiral galaxies, selected from the CO Multi-line Imaging of Nearby Galaxies (COMING) legacy project of Nobeyama Radio Observatory, have been analyzed by Fourier decomposition to determine their basic kinematic properties, such as circular and noncircular velocities. On average, the investigated barred (SAB and SB) galaxies exhibit a ratio of noncircular to circular velocities of molecular gas larger by a factor of 1.5-2 than non-barred (SA) spiral galaxies at radii within the bar semimajor axis $a_mathrm{b}$ at 1 kpc resolution, with a maximum at a radius of $R/a_mathrm{b}sim0.3$. Residual velocity field images, created by subtracting model velocity fields from the data, reveal that this trend is caused by kpc-scale streaming motions of molecular gas in the bar region. Applying a new method based on radial velocity reversal, we estimated the corotation radius $R_mathrm{CR}$ and bar pattern speed $Omega_mathrm{b}$ in seven SAB and SB systems. The ratio of the corotation to bar radius is found to be in a range of $mathcal{R}equiv R_mathrm{CR}/a_mathrm{b}sim0.8mathrm{-}1.6$, suggesting that intermediate (SBb-SBc), luminous barred spiral galaxies host fast and slow rotator bars. Tentative negative correlations are found for $Omega_mathrm{b}$ vs. $a_mathrm{b}$ and $Omega_mathrm{b}$ vs. total stellar mass $M_ast$, indicating that bars in massive disks are larger and rotate slower, possibly a consequence of angular momentum transfer. The kinematic properties of SAB and SB galaxies, derived from Fourier decomposition, are compared with recent numerical simulations that incorporate various rotation curve models and galaxy interactions.
We investigate the molecular gas properties of galaxies across the main sequence of star-forming (SF) galaxies in the local Universe using $^{12}$CO($J=1-0$) (hereafter $^{12}$CO) and $^{13}$CO($J=1-0$) ($^{13}$CO) mapping data of 147 nearby galaxies obtained in the COMING project, a legacy project of the Nobeyama Radio Observatory. In order to improve signal-to-noise ratios of both lines, we stack all the pixels where $^{12}$CO emission is detected after aligning the line center expected from the first-moment map of $^{12}$CO. As a result, $^{13}$CO emission is successfully detected in 80 galaxies with a signal-to-noise ratio larger than three. The error-weighted mean of integrated-intensity ratio of $^{12}$CO to $^{13}$CO lines ($R_{1213}$) of the 80 galaxies is $10.9$ with a standard deviation of $7.0$. We find that (1) $R_{1213}$ positively correlates to specific star-formation rate (sSFR) with a correlation coefficient of $0.46$, and (2) both flux ratio of IRAS 60~$mu$m to 100~$mu$m ($f_{60}/f_{100}$) and inclination-corrected linewidth of $^{12}$CO stacked spectra ($sigma_{{rm ^{12}CO},i}$) also correlate with sSFR for galaxies with the $R_{1213}$ measurement. Our results support the scenario where $R_{1213}$ variation is mainly caused by the changes in molecular-gas properties such as temperature and turbulence. The consequent variation of CO-to-H$_2$ conversion factor across the SF main sequence is not large enough to completely extinguish the known correlations between sSFR and $M_{rm mol}/M_{rm star}$ ($mu_{rm mol}$) or star-formation efficiency (SFE) reported in previous studies, while this variation would strengthen (weaken) the sSFR-SFE (sSFR-$mu_{rm mol}$) correlation.