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Main Authors: Davis, Timothy A., Brown, Toby, Jimenez-Donaire, Maria J., Wilson, Christine D., Bisaria, Dhruv, Boselli, Alessandro, Catinella, Barbara, Chung, Aeree, Cortese, Luca, Ellison, Sara, Lee, Bumhyun, Roberts, Ian D., Spekkens, Kristine, Villanueva, Vicente, Zabel, Nikki
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2507.17553
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author Davis, Timothy A.
Brown, Toby
Jimenez-Donaire, Maria J.
Wilson, Christine D.
Bisaria, Dhruv
Boselli, Alessandro
Catinella, Barbara
Chung, Aeree
Cortese, Luca
Ellison, Sara
Lee, Bumhyun
Roberts, Ian D.
Spekkens, Kristine
Villanueva, Vicente
Zabel, Nikki
author_facet Davis, Timothy A.
Brown, Toby
Jimenez-Donaire, Maria J.
Wilson, Christine D.
Bisaria, Dhruv
Boselli, Alessandro
Catinella, Barbara
Chung, Aeree
Cortese, Luca
Ellison, Sara
Lee, Bumhyun
Roberts, Ian D.
Spekkens, Kristine
Villanueva, Vicente
Zabel, Nikki
contents In this work we study CO isotopologue emission in the largest cluster galaxy sample to date: 48 VERTICO spiral galaxies in Virgo. We show for the first time in a significant sample that the physical conditions within the molecular gas appear to change as a galaxy's ISM is affected by environmental processes. 13CO is detected across the sample, both directly and via stacking, while C18O is detected in a smaller number of systems. We use these data to study trends with global and radial galaxy properties. We show that the CO/13CO line ratio changes systematically with a variety of galaxy properties, including mean gas surface density, HI-deficiency and galaxy morphology. 13CO/C18O line ratios vary significantly, both radially and between galaxies, suggesting real variations in abundances are present. Such abundance changes may be due to star formation history differences, or speculatively even stellar initial mass function variations. We present a model where the optical depth of the molecular gas appears to change as a galaxy's ISM is affected by environmental processes. The molecular gas appears to become more transparent as the molecular medium is stripped, and then more opaque as the tightly bound remnant gas settles deep in the galaxy core. This explains the variations we see, and also helps explain similar observations in cluster early-type galaxies. Next generation simulations and dedicated observations of additional isotopologues could thus provide a powerful tool to help us understand the impact of environment on the ISM, and thus the quenching of galaxies.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2507_17553
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle VERTICO IX: Signatures of environmental processing of the gas in Virgo cluster spiral galaxies through mapping of CO isotopologues
Davis, Timothy A.
Brown, Toby
Jimenez-Donaire, Maria J.
Wilson, Christine D.
Bisaria, Dhruv
Boselli, Alessandro
Catinella, Barbara
Chung, Aeree
Cortese, Luca
Ellison, Sara
Lee, Bumhyun
Roberts, Ian D.
Spekkens, Kristine
Villanueva, Vicente
Zabel, Nikki
Astrophysics of Galaxies
In this work we study CO isotopologue emission in the largest cluster galaxy sample to date: 48 VERTICO spiral galaxies in Virgo. We show for the first time in a significant sample that the physical conditions within the molecular gas appear to change as a galaxy's ISM is affected by environmental processes. 13CO is detected across the sample, both directly and via stacking, while C18O is detected in a smaller number of systems. We use these data to study trends with global and radial galaxy properties. We show that the CO/13CO line ratio changes systematically with a variety of galaxy properties, including mean gas surface density, HI-deficiency and galaxy morphology. 13CO/C18O line ratios vary significantly, both radially and between galaxies, suggesting real variations in abundances are present. Such abundance changes may be due to star formation history differences, or speculatively even stellar initial mass function variations. We present a model where the optical depth of the molecular gas appears to change as a galaxy's ISM is affected by environmental processes. The molecular gas appears to become more transparent as the molecular medium is stripped, and then more opaque as the tightly bound remnant gas settles deep in the galaxy core. This explains the variations we see, and also helps explain similar observations in cluster early-type galaxies. Next generation simulations and dedicated observations of additional isotopologues could thus provide a powerful tool to help us understand the impact of environment on the ISM, and thus the quenching of galaxies.
title VERTICO IX: Signatures of environmental processing of the gas in Virgo cluster spiral galaxies through mapping of CO isotopologues
topic Astrophysics of Galaxies
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2507.17553