PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF G331.5-0.1: THE LUMINOUS CENTRAL REGION OF A GIANT MOLECULAR CLOUD
Author
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Merello, Manuel
Author
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Bronfman Aguiló, Leonardo
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Author
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Garay Brignardello, Guido
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Author
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Nyman, Lars Ake
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Author
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Evans II, Neal J.
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Author
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Walmsley, C. Malcolm
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Admission date
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2014-03-06T20:18:30Z
Available date
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2014-03-06T20:18:30Z
Publication date
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2013-09-01
Cita de ítem
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The Astrophysical Journal, 774:38 (20pp), 2013
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Identifier
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doi:10.1088/0004-637X/774/1/38
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/126429
General note
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Artículo de publicación ISI
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Abstract
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We report molecular line and dust continuum observations toward the high-mass star-forming region G331.5-0.1,
one of the most luminous regions of massive star formation in the Milky Way, located at the tangent region of
the Norma spiral arm, at a distance of 7.5 kpc. Molecular emission was mapped toward the G331.5-0.1 GMC
in the CO(J = 1 → 0) and C18O(J = 1 → 0) lines with NANTEN, while its central region was mapped in
CS(J = 2 → 1 and J = 5 → 4) with SEST, and in CS(J = 7 → 6) and 13CO(J = 3 → 2) with ASTE.
Continuum emission mapped at 1.2 mm with SIMBA and at 0.87 mm with LABOCA reveal the presence of six
compact and luminous dust clumps, making this source one of the most densely populated central regions of a GMC
in the Galaxy. The dust clumps are associated with molecular gas and they have the following average properties:
size of 1.6 pc, mass of 3.2 × 103M , molecular hydrogen density of 3.7 × 104 cm−3, dust temperature of 32 K,
and integrated luminosity of 5.7 × 105 L , consistent with values found toward other massive star-forming dust
clumps. The CS and 13CO spectra show the presence of two velocity components: a high-velocity component at
∼−89 km s−1, seen toward four of the clumps, and a low-velocity component at ∼−101 km s−1 seen toward the
other two clumps. Radio continuum emission is present toward four of the molecular clumps, with spectral index
estimated for two of them of 0.8 ± 0.2 and 1.2 ± 0.2. A high-velocity molecular outflow is found at the center of the
brightest clump, with a line width of 26 km s−1 (FWHM) in CS(J = 7 → 6). Observations of SiO(J = 7 → 6 and
J = 8 → 7), and SO(JK = 88 → 77 and JK = 87 → 76) lines provide estimates of the gas rotational temperature
toward this outflow >120 K and >75 K, respectively.