Submillimeter observations of giant molecular clouds in the Large Magellanic Cloud: Temperature and density as determined from J=3-2 and J=1-0 transitions of CO
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2008-04Metadata
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Minamidani, Tetsuhiro
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Submillimeter observations of giant molecular clouds in the Large Magellanic Cloud: Temperature and density as determined from J=3-2 and J=1-0 transitions of CO
Author
- Minamidani, Tetsuhiro;
- Mizuno, Norikazu;
- Mizuno, Yoji;
- Kawamura, Akiko;
- Onishi, Toshikazu;
- Hasegawa, Tetsuo;
- Tatematsu, Ken’ichi;
- Ikeda, Masafumi;
- Moriguchi, Yoshiaki;
- Yamaguchi, Nobuyuki;
- Ott, Jürgen;
- Wong, Tony;
- Muller, Erik;
- Pineda, Jorge L.;
- Hughes, Annie;
- Staveley-Smith, Lister;
- Klein, Ulrich;
- Mizuno, Akira;
- Nikolic, Silvana;
- Booth, Roy S.;
- Heikkilä, Arto;
- Nyman, Lars-Ake;
- Lerner, Mikael;
- Garay Brignardello, Guido;
- Kim, Sungeun;
- Fujishita, Motosuji;
- Kawase, Tokuichi;
- Rubio López, Mónica;
- Fukui, Yasuo;
Abstract
We have carried out submillimeter (CO)-C-12(J = 3-2) observations of six giant molecular clouds (GMCs) in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) with the ASTE 10 m submillimeter telescope at a spatial resolution of 5 pc and very high sensitivity. We have identified 32 molecular clumps in the GMCs and revealed significant details of the warm and dense molecular gas with n(H-2) similar to 10(3)-10(5) cm(-3) and T-kin similar to 60 K. These data are combined with (CO)-C-12(J = 1-0) and (CO)-C-13(J = 1-0) results and compared with LVG calculations. The results indicate that clumps that we detected are distributed continuously from cool (similar to 10-30 K) to warm (greater than or similar to 30-200 K), and warm clumps are distributed from less dense (similar to 10(3) cm(-3)) to dense (similar to 10(3.5)-10(5) cm(-3)). We found that the ratio of (CO)-C-12(J = 3-2) to (CO)-C-12(J = 1-0) emission is sensitive to and is well correlated with the local H alpha flux. We infer that differences of clump properties represent an evolutionary sequence of GMCs in terms of density increase leading to star formation. Type I and II GMCs (starless GMCs and GMCs with H II regions only, respectively) are at the young phase of star formation where density does not yet become high enough to show active star formation, and Type III GMCs (GMCs with H II regions and young star clusters) represent the later phase where the average density is increased and the GMCs are forming massive stars. The high kinetic temperature correlated with H alpha flux suggests that FUV heating is dominant in the molecular gas of the LMC.
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ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL SUPPLEMENT SERIES Volume: 175 Issue: 2 Pages: 485-508 Published: APR 2008
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