1. What are the contributions in this paper?
The authors report the discovery of a powerful molecular wind from the nucleus of the non-interacting nearby S0 field galaxy NGC 1266.
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2. Why was a velocity extent of only 420 km s1 available?
Due to limited correlator bandwidth, a velocity extent of only 420 km s−1 at 2.5 km s−1 resolution was available for the CO(1–0) line at the time of the observations, enough to adequately measure the properties of the center of the line, but not of the wings.
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3. How do the authors determine the volume densities and column densities in the wind?
The authors use the RADEX large velocity gradient (LVG) software (van der Tak et al. 2007) to determine volume densities and column densities in the wind.
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4. How many M yr1 does the SFR from the FIR emission contribute?
For NGC 1266, L24 = 1.06 × 1043 erg s−1 once adjusted to their adopted distance (Temi et al. 2009), so the associated SFR24 ≈ 1.5 M⊙ yr−1 (the stellar continuum contribution to the 24µm emission is << 1%), within 33% of the SFRFIR derived from the FIR emission.
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