LABOCA observations of giant molecular clouds in the southwest region of the Small Magellanic Cloud
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Bot, Caroline
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LABOCA observations of giant molecular clouds in the southwest region of the Small Magellanic Cloud
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Abstract
Context. The amount of molecular gas is a key to understanding the future star formation in a galaxy. Because H2 is difficult to
observe directly in dense and cold clouds, tracers such as the CO molecule are used. However, at low metallicities especially, CO only
traces the shielded interiors of the clouds. In this context, millimeter dust emission can be used as a tracer to unveil the total dense gas
masses. However, the comparison of masses deduced from the continuum SIMBA 1.2 mm emission and virial masses (understood
to trace the entire potential of the clouds) in a sample of giant molecular clouds in the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC) by previous
studies found a discrepancy between these two quantities that requires explanation.
Aims. We attempt to more accurately assess possible uncertainties in the dust emission observed in the sample of giant molecular
clouds from the SMC. We focus on the mass comparison in the densest parts of the giant molecular clouds where CO is detected to
confirm the mass discrepancy previously observed.
Methods. New observations of the southwest region of the SMC were obtained with the LABOCA camera on the APEX telescope.
All the giant molecular clouds previously observed in CO are detected and their emission at 870 μm is compared to ancillary data.
The different contributions to the sub-millimeter emission are estimated, as well as dust properties (temperatures, emissivities), to
determine molecular cloud masses precisely.
Results. The (sub-)millimeter emission observed in the giant molecular clouds in the southwest region of the SMC is dominated by
dust emission, and masses are deduced for the part of each cloud where CO is detected and compared to the virial masses. The mass
discrepancy between both methods is confirmed at 870 μm using the LABOCA observations: the virial masses are on average 4 times
lower than the masses of dense gas inferred from dust emission, in contrast to what is observed for equivalent clouds in our Galaxy.
Conclusions. At present, the origin of this mass discrepancy in the SMC remains unknown. The direct interpretation of this effect is
that the CO linewidth used to compute virial masses do not measure the full velocity distribution of the gas. Geometrical effects and
uncertainties in the dust properties are also discussed.
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Artículo de publicación ISI
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URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/125834
DOI: DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/200913372
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A&A 524, A52 (2010) Pp. 1-11
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