Ammonia in the interstellar medium of a starbursting disc at z=2.6
We report the detection of the ground state rotational emission of ammonia, ortho-NH 3 (J K = 1 0 → 0 0) in a gravitationally lensed intrinsically hyperluminous star-bursting galaxy at z = 2.6. The integrated line profile is consistent with other molecular and atomic emission lines which have resolved kinematics well modelled by a 5 kpc-diameter rotating disc. This implies that the gas responsible for NH 3 emission is broadly tracing the global molecular reservoir, but likely distributed in pockets of high density (n ≳ 5 × 10 4 cm −3). With a luminosity of 2.8 × 10 6 L ☉, the NH 3 emission represents 2.5 × 10 −7 of the total infrared luminosity of the galaxy, comparable to the ratio observed in the Kleinmann-Low nebula in Orion and consistent with sites of massive star formation in the Milky Way. If L NH3/L IR serves as a proxy for the 'mode' of star formation, this hints that the nature of star formation in extreme starbursts in the early Universe is similar to that of Galactic star-forming regions, with a large fraction of the cold interstellar medium in this state, plausibly driven by a storm of violent disc instabilities in the gas-dominated disc. This supports the 'full of Orions' picture of star formation in the most extreme galaxies seen close to the peak epoch of stellar mass assembly.
Item Type | Article |
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Additional information | © 2022 The Author(s). This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, to view a copy of the license, see: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ |
Keywords | astro-ph.ga, galaxies: starburst, submillimetre: ism, gravitational lensing: strong, submillimetre: galaxies, galaxies: high-redshift, astronomy and astrophysics, space and planetary science |
Date Deposited | 15 May 2025 15:00 |
Last Modified | 31 May 2025 00:35 |