ATLASGAL - Kinematic distances and the dense gas mass distribution of the inner Galaxy
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Wienen, M.
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ATLASGAL - Kinematic distances and the dense gas mass distribution of the inner Galaxy
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Abstract
Context. The formation of high mass stars and clusters occurs in giant molecular clouds. Objects in evolved stages of massive star
formation such as protostars, hot molecular cores, and ultracompact HII regions have been studied in more detail than earlier, colder
objects. Further progress thus requires the analysis of the time before massive protostellar objects can be probed by their infrared
emission. With this in mind, the APEX Telescope Large Area Survey of the whole inner Galactic plane at 870 μm (ATLASGAL) has
been carried out to provide a global view of cold dust and star formation at submillimetre wavelengths.
Aims. We derive kinematic distances to a large sample of massive cold dust clumps from their measured line velocities. We estimate
masses and sizes of ATLASGAL sources, for which the kinematic distance ambiguity is resolved.
Methods. The ATLASGAL sample is divided into groups of sources, which are located close together, mostly within a radius of 2 pc,
and have velocities in a similar range with a median velocity dispersion of ∼1 km s−1. We use NH3, N2H+, and CS velocities to
calculate near and far kinematic distances to those groups.
Results. We obtain 296 groups of ATLASGAL sources in the first quadrant and 393 groups in the fourth quadrant, which are coherent
in space and velocity. We analyse HI self-absorption and HI absorption to resolve the kinematic distance ambiguity to 689 complexes
of submm clumps. They are associated with 12CO emission probing large-scale structure and 13CO (1–0) line as well as the 870 μm
dust continuum on a smaller scale. We obtain a scale height of ∼28±2 pc and displacement below the Galactic midplane of ∼−7±1 pc.
Within distances from 2 to 18 kpc ATLASGAL clumps have a broad range of gas masses with a median of 1050 M as well as a wide
distribution of radii with a median of 0.4 pc. Their distribution in galactocentric radii is correlated with spiral arms.
Conclusions. Using a statistically significant ATLASGAL sample we derive a power-law exponent of −2.2 ± 0.1 of the clump
mass function. This is consistent with the slope derived for clusters and with that of the stellar initial mass function. Examining the
power-law index for different galactocentric distances and various source samples shows that it is independent of environment and
evolutionary phase. Fitting the mass-size relationship by a power law gives a slope of 1.76 ± 0.01 for cold sources such as IRDCs and
warm clumps associated with HII regions.
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Artículo de publicación ISI
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URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/132694
DOI: DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/201424802
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Astronomy & Astrophysics 579, A91 (2015)
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