SHAO Astrophysics Colloquium
Title: An ALMA View of Local Luminous Infrared Galaxies/Quasars
Speaker: Yu GAO (高煜), Purple Mountain Observatory
Time: 3:00 pm, Nov. 14th (Thursday)
Location: Lecture Hall, 3rd floor
Abstract: After a brief overview on the current millimeter (mm)/submm interferometers, we quickly go over the roadmaps leading to the ALMA. We then present a summary of our ALMA CO(6-5) imaging observations in 6 nearby luminous infrared (IR) galaxies (LIRGs) as well as CO(1-0) maps in 8 local IR quasars. CO(6-5) probes the warm and dense molecular gas and shows the tightest linear correlations with the far-IR (i.e., the star formation rate, SFR), whereas CO(1-0) traces the total molecular gas with a nonlinear relationship with the SFR (aka, the Kennicutt-Schmidt laws) in galaxies. Our ALMA images with superb angular resolutions explore the physical conditions in cold dust and warm/dense molecular gas at a spatial resolution on the characteristic size-scale of giant molecular clouds in LIRGs. A variety of CO(6-5) morphology and kinematics in nuclear regions — from clumpy “chaotic” ~kpc disk with starburst ring to compact AGN/starburst and that with possible warm/dense gas outflows — reveals the complex process in the fueling dense molecular gas into central nuclear regions, the heating/cooling of the gas and dust, and the feeding the compact starbursts/AGNs in LIRGs. CO(1-0) observations of IR QSOs reveal a wide diversity of CO distribution and kinematics of their host galaxies: about half of them show rotating disks yet the merging is also still ongoing in some host galaxies of IR QSOs. We finally discuss these in the ‘standard’ evolution scenario from gas-rich mergers to quasars.