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ALMA Observations of Giant Molecular Clouds in the Starburst Dwarf Galaxy Henize 2-10

Published 5 Dec 2018 in astro-ph.GA | (1812.02180v2)

Abstract: We present new ${ }{12}$CO(J=1-0) observations of Henize 2-10, a blue compact dwarf galaxy about 8.7 Mpc away, taken with the Atacama Large Millimeter Array. These are the highest spatial and spectral resolution observations, to date, of the molecular gas in this starburst galaxy. We measure a molecular mass of $1.2\times108 M_\odot$ in Henize 2-10, and most of the molecular gas is contained within a region having a size of about 310 pc. We use the CPROPS algorithm to identify 119 resolved giant molecular clouds distributed throughout the galaxy, and the molecular gas contained within these clouds make up between 45 to 70% of the total molecular mass. The molecular clouds in Henize 2-10 have similar median sizes (~26 pc), luminous masses (~$ 4\times 105$ $M_\odot$), and surface densities (~$180$ $M_\odot$ pc${-2}$) to Milky Way clouds. We provide evidence that Henize 2-10 clouds tend to be in virial equilibrium, with the virial and luminous masses scaling according to $M_{vir}\propto M_{lum}{1.2\pm0.1}$, similar to clouds in the Milky Way. However, we measure a scaling relationship between luminous mass and size, $M_{vir}\propto R{3.0\pm0.3}$, that is steeper than what is observed in Milky Way clouds. Assuming Henize 2-10 molecular clouds are virialized, we infer values of the CO-to-H$_2$ conversion factor ranging from 0.5 to 13 times the standard value in the Solar Neighborhood. Given star formation efficiencies as low as 5%, the most massive molecular clouds in Henize 2-10 currently have enough mass to form the next generation of super-star clusters in the galaxy.

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