Arp 302, a luminous infrared source (L_{IR} = 4.2x10^{11} Lsun), consisting
of two spiral galaxies (VV340A and VV340B) with nuclear separation of 40'', has
the highest CO luminosity known. Observations with the BIMA array at 5'' X 7''
resolution reveal that the CO emission is extended over 23.0 kpc in the edge-on
spiral galaxy, VV340A, corresponding to 6.7x10^{10} Msun of H_2. In the
companion face-on galaxy, VV340B, the CO emission is extended over ~10.0 kpc,
with 1.1x10^{10} Msun of H_2. The large CO extent is in strong contrast to
starburst systems, such as Arp 220, in which the CO extent is typically ≤ 1
kpc. Furthermore, LIR/M(H_2) is found to be ≤ 6.0 Lsun/Msun throughout
both galaxies. Thus the high IR luminosity of Arp 302 is apparently not due to
starbursts in the nuclear regions, but is due to its unusually large amount of
molecular gas forming stars at a rate similar to giant molecular clouds in the
Milky Way disk. Arp 302 consists of a pair of very gas-rich spiral galaxies
that may be interacting and in a phase before a likely onset of starbursts.Comment: AAS Latex plus two postscript figures. ApJ Letters (accepted