Abstract

We report measurements of the [C II] fine-structure line at 157.714 ?m in 30 normal star-forming galaxies with the Long Wavelength Spectrometer (LWS) on the Infrared Space Observatory (ISO). The ratio of the line to total far-infrared (FIR) luminosity, LC II/LFIR, measures the ratio of the cooling of gas to that of dust, and thus the efficiency of the grain photoelectric heating process. This ratio varies by more than a factor of 40 in the current sample. About two-thirds of the galaxies have LC II/LFIR ratios in the narrow range of (2-7) ? 10 -->?3. The other one-third show trends of decreasing LC II/LFIR with increasing dust temperature, as measured by the flux ratio of infrared emission at 60 and 100 ?m, F?(60 ?m)/F?(100 ?m), and with increasing star formation activity, measured by the ratio of FIR and blue-band luminosity, LFIR/L -->B. We also find three FIR-bright galaxies that are deficient in the [C II] line, which is undetected with 3 ? upper limits of LC II/LFIR ?4. The trend in the LC II/LFIR ratio with the temperature of dust and with star formation activity may be due to decreased efficiency of photoelectric heating of gas at high UV radiation intensity as dust grains become positively charged, decreasing the yield and the energy of the photoelectrons. The three galaxies with no observed photodissociation region lines have among the highest LFIR/L -->B and F?(60 ?m)/F?(100 ?m) ratios. Their lack of [C II] lines may be due to a continuing trend of decreasing LC II/LFIR with increasing star formation activity and dust temperature seen in one-third of the sample with warm IRAS colors. In that case, the upper limits on LC II/LFIR imply a ratio of UV flux to gas density of G -->0/n>10 cm -->3 (where G -->0 is in units of the local average interstellar field). The low LC II/LFIR ratio could also be due to either weak [C II], owing to self-absorption, or a strong FIR continuum from regions weak in [C II], such as dense H II regions or plasma ionized by hard radiation of active galactic nuclei. The mid-infrared and radio images of these galaxies show that most of the emission comes from a compact nucleus. CO and H I are detected in these galaxies, with H I seen in absorption toward the nucleus.

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