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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.
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 virtua
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
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
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. Youn
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 p